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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.palmtops
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!torn!newshost.uwo.ca!irus.rri.uwo.ca!ppicot
- From: ppicot@irus.rri.uwo.ca (Paul Picot)
- Subject: Re: Sharp Palmtops???
- Organization: University of Western Ontario, London
- Date: Mon, 11 Jan 1993 16:23:19 GMT
- Message-ID: <1993Jan11.162319.2262@julian.uwo.ca>
- References: <698@thunder.LakeheadU.Ca> <1993Jan8.212126.16013@julian.uwo.ca> <1993Jan10.205957.463@mkseast.uucp>
- Sender: news@julian.uwo.ca (USENET News System)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: oort.irus.rri.uwo.ca
- Lines: 79
-
-
- dale@mkseast.uucp (Dale Gass) writes:
- >fbap2018@nusunix1.nus.sg (EE POH KHIAM LINCOLN) writes:
- >>Unfortunately, in high power mode AND using the serial port will
- >>drain the batteries like crazy (2 hrs?). Using the AC adapter helps
- >>but to my dismay, the batteries will ALSO run down albeit slower.
- >>
- >>Perhaps my hardware is faulty. Anyone with similar experiences?
-
- I have found new Duracells will last an honest 4-5 hours on high power mode,
- (some at 5 MHz) and a week of heavy use in low-power mode (say 2-4 hrs/day).
- (This is running them down to the "Replace Main Batteries" message.
-
- >
- >I find the serial port does drain batteries much quicker, but with the AC
- >adapter, I've experienced no noticable battery drain with extensive serial
- >port usage.
-
- Thanks for your other tips, Dale.
-
- For everyone's information, here are some measurements I made on my PC-3100:
-
- Power Usage Summary:
- Running off batteries:
- Low battery signal comes on about 3.2 V (New batteries are about 4.8 V)
- Continuous drain while OFF: 1.3 mA (must be that psuedo-static ram)
- Standby (No program running, no keys pressed, but display on):
- 55 mA with popup, 58 mA with filem, 51 mA with DOS prompt.
- All independent of clock speed.
- Running, or key held down:
- 10 MHz: 220 mA, 3 MHz: 118 mA, 1 MHz: 86 mA
- Fast typing: (50 wpm or so)
- 10 MHz: 120 mA, 3 MHz: 100 mA, 1 MHz: 86 mA, (but unusable: editor too slow)
- Running Laplink:
- 10 MHz: 330 mA, 5 MHz: 227 mA, 1 MHz: 150 mA
- Low power mode disabled:
- 10 MHz: 285 mA, 3 MHz: 180 mA, 1 MHz: 145 mA
-
- Horowitz & Hill (The Art of Electronics, 2nd ed. - Great book! Buy It!)
- page 923 says that 'AA' alkalines are 1400 mAh @ 10 mA, 1000 mAh @ 100 mA.
-
- (I expect LithEons will perform very well in this application -- too bad
- they are still 2x the price/kWh compared to Duracells)
-
- On AC power: At 6.0 volts input
- Aux power kick in/out occurs at 5.0 volts (hysteresis is about 0.1V?)
- OFF: 4.8 mA
- Standby:
- 41 mA with popup, independent of clock speed
- Running Laplink:
- 10 MHz: 200 mA, 5 MHz: 140 mA
-
- With the AC adapter plugged in, there is ZERO drain from the betteries.
- (OK, less than I can measure, which is 1 microamp)
- The adapter can be plugged in with the power on - the automatic switchover
- is pretty robust. The AC power can even fail, and the machine will switch
- over to batteries automatically. This might not be considered a feature,
- though. I plugged my AC adapter in to the computer once, but forgot to
- plug it into the wall. After about 4 hours of *heavy* use, (low power
- mode disabled, compiling code, and lots of serial port use), the batteries
- were dead. Annoying.
-
-
- On an unrelated topic:
- Does anybody know what is that button on the back/bottom by the battery
- compartment for? It doesn't seem to be electrical in nature - you can
- pull it out of the slot it is in. An expansion chassis hardpoint perhaps?
-
- Finally, since this message will be going to 'world', I'll repeat my my
- request for information:
-
- I would like to hear from other users of this machine. Have you any
- tips/tricks/favorite utils? Does anyone know anything about BIOS calls?
- (particularly for power managment stuff). I'll be happy to share all
- I learn.
-
-
- Paul Picot ppicot@irus.rri.uwo.ca
-
-