Thread: TomTom
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Dave Plowman (News) Dave Plowman (News) is offline
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In article ,
Jules Richardson wrote:
On Fri, 21 Oct 2011 23:55:44 +0100, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
I've upgraded to a much larger screen one which is also nice and slim.
But the power connector is a small USB one. Could I do something like
the same with that, but obviously using an easier to fit connector than
the USB one?


Going from memory here...


For most little USB charger/device combinations, D- and D+ are tied
together (sometimes shorted, sometimes with a resistor), and there maybe
be resistors between those pins and +5V / GND, too. AIUI, if a device
sees that D- and D+ are tied, it takes that to mean that it's connected
via USB to a charger, rather than something that it's expected to
communicate with.


Sometimes the tieing / resistors are buried within the USB connector
itself, but sometimes it's done back at the PSU and the 4-way cable/
connector are just straight-through.


If you've got the former, you just need a 2-way connector in the
dashboard, because the USB connector (which I assume you'll still be
using to connect to the Tomtom itself) contains all the needed gubbins.
Lots of robust 2-way connectors exist.


For the latter though you'd need a four-way connector of some form - I'm
not sure what would be best there.


Thanks - I wasn't certain what would be in the cable connecting the
charger to the USB socket. Obviously, it's only needed to supply the DC. I
could just hack the cable in two and use a connector for the number of
cores, one to one. But on the old TomTom, there were three wires - one a
sort of voltage sensor which was linked to one of the other wires at the
output - but it worked fine with two so I got away with a two pole plug
and socket. Since the lead beyond that was only a couple of inches long.

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Dave Plowman London SW
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