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- Path: sparky!uunet!world!ksr!jfw
- From: jfw@ksr.com (John F. Woods)
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Subject: Re: Amperage meaning?
- Message-ID: <15237@ksr.com>
- Date: 27 Aug 92 14:23:16 EDT
- References: <1992Aug25.192312.22175@javelin.sim.es.com> <massoud.55@chemteca.sdsu.edu>
- Sender: news@ksr.com
- Lines: 23
-
- massoud@chemteca.sdsu.edu (Massoud Ajami) writes:
- >In article <1992Aug25.192312.22175@javelin.sim.es.com> pashdown@javelin.sim.es.com (Pete Ashdown) writes:
- >>Alright, so I admit it, I've forgotten a bit of my physics. The question is
- >>this: I recently purchased a small transmitter that can work off either a 9
- >>volt battery or a 12 volt power supply. I happen to have a 12 volt power
- >>supply that I use to power my laser, but it is at 2.5 amps. I realize that
- >>this amperage is far more than I need for the transmitter, but is it too much?
-
- >Let me tel you this: do you know that your car battry can supply like 300
- >ampers if it is needed, but doesn't do any damage to your car radio! Having
- >more supplied current to a device is like going to "all you can eat" place,
- >any device draws as much current as it needs, but you can not under supply
- >the current.
-
- One thing to be aware of -- if the 12V power supply is a computer power supply,
- and if it is a *switching* power supply, it may well have a _minimum_ current
- requirement in order to maintain regulation. If the power supply has a big,
- heavy transformer, it's most likely a linear supply, in which case it will be
- happy loafing at a light load. If the supply came out of a peecee, and if the
- transmitter is a tens-to-hundreds of milliamps load, you might be in trouble
- (easily rectified (heh), though: put a 12ohm, 12W resistor across the power
- supply to guarantee an amp of output current, which should keep the supply
- happy. Maybe 24ohms, 6W (for .5A) would do.).
-