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GTO69RA4 May 13th 04 02:31 AM

Charging a portable booster/jump pack?
 
Just was given a fairly new portable booster pack. You know, one of those
things with a little battery and a couple jumper cables. Anyone know what kind
of current I should charge it with? Didn't get a charger with it. Seems to use
an external AC power brick and a built-in digital circuit for a few LEDs.

I'll also have to open this thing up and look at the battery, since the "12v"
output is over 20...

GTO(John)

Bruce L. Bergman May 13th 04 04:56 PM

Charging a portable booster/jump pack?
 
On 13 May 2004 01:31:11 GMT, (GTO69RA4) wrote:

Just was given a fairly new portable booster pack. You know, one of those
things with a little battery and a couple jumper cables. Anyone know what kind
of current I should charge it with? Didn't get a charger with it. Seems to use
an external AC power brick and a built-in digital circuit for a few LEDs.

I'll also have to open this thing up and look at the battery, since the "12v"
output is over 20...

GTO(John)


Open the pack to see if it has a charging circuit inside, if it does
you probably feed it raw power and let the charge circuit do the rest
- look near the jack, they usually put a cute little sticker there by
the charging jack telling you what flavor of volts to feed it.

If it has no charge circuits, you can buy "wall wart" transformers
with the 12V Gel Cell "float charger" circuit built in. Haunt the
usual places like All Electronics & American Science.

You can also get open-circuit-board float chargers meant for burglar
alarm systems in those kinds of places, just feed it 16VAC 40VA and
it'll happily charge a gel cell.

-- Bruce --

Rex B May 13th 04 05:26 PM

Charging a portable booster/jump pack?
 

|| If it has no charge circuits, you can buy "wall wart" transformers
||with the 12V Gel Cell "float charger" circuit built in. Haunt the
||usual places like All Electronics & American Science.

-HF has a 1-amp float charger for $10 that I've used on a variety of small 12V
batteries for long periods.
Texas Parts Guy

Bob Paulin May 14th 04 02:34 PM

Charging a portable booster/jump pack?
 


GTO69RA4 wrote in article
...


I'll also have to open this thing up and look at the battery, since the

"12v"
output is over 20...


....which is why many knowledgeable shops refuse to have one of these in
their service truck.

When fully charged, some of these "packs" have a 30+ volt output.....

......just imagine what that can do to some of today's fragile electronic
components....

I used to sell these when I managed a NAPA store - always to the "retail"
customer, but never to the professional. Go figure!



Backlash May 14th 04 02:47 PM

Charging a portable booster/jump pack?
 
Maybe that's why that little thing would spin over my diesel tractor so
well! G

RJ

--
"Have no one say it, and say it to your shame, that all was well here, until
YOU came."




"Bob Paulin" wrote in message
news:01c439b7$dd312380$ac9ac3d8@race...


GTO69RA4 wrote in article
...


I'll also have to open this thing up and look at the battery, since the

"12v"
output is over 20...


...which is why many knowledgeable shops refuse to have one of these in
their service truck.

When fully charged, some of these "packs" have a 30+ volt output.....

.....just imagine what that can do to some of today's fragile electronic
components....

I used to sell these when I managed a NAPA store - always to the "retail"
customer, but never to the professional. Go figure!





Martin H. Eastburn May 16th 04 05:33 AM

Charging a portable booster/jump pack?
 
GTO69RA4 wrote:

Just was given a fairly new portable booster pack. You know, one of those
things with a little battery and a couple jumper cables. Anyone know what kind
of current I should charge it with? Didn't get a charger with it. Seems to use
an external AC power brick and a built-in digital circuit for a few LEDs.

I'll also have to open this thing up and look at the battery, since the "12v"
output is over 20...

GTO(John)

Open circuit might be over 20, loaded down it would drop.
One would want higher than 12V so current would flow.
Martin

--
Martin Eastburn, Barbara Eastburn
@ home at Lion's Lair with our computer
NRA LOH, NRA Life
NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder


Martin H. Eastburn May 16th 04 05:36 AM

Charging a portable booster/jump pack?
 
Bob Paulin wrote:

GTO69RA4 wrote in article
...



I'll also have to open this thing up and look at the battery, since the


"12v"

output is over 20...



...which is why many knowledgeable shops refuse to have one of these in
their service truck.

When fully charged, some of these "packs" have a 30+ volt output.....

.....just imagine what that can do to some of today's fragile electronic
components....

I used to sell these when I managed a NAPA store - always to the "retail"
customer, but never to the professional. Go figure!


The unit has an output resistance high enough that when plugged in, it drops.
One wouldn't want a high current one - might come apart in the sitting compartment.
If one needed the booster, the drain would be strong.

If one was using one for a portable 12 volt supply, then that might be a real issue.

Martin

--
Martin Eastburn, Barbara Eastburn
@ home at Lion's Lair with our computer
NRA LOH, NRA Life
NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder



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