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Disregarding Murphy, the Mio will always be connected to external power, so
no low battery. I hooked it up yesterday and spent a half hour or so sitting in the cockpit making glider noises. Everything looks good. I appreciate the advice about the 302 acting up and, should I see that sort of behavior, will simply switch batteries or shut off the Mio and see if there's any change. It's hard to imagine the Mio using much more than 300 mA. "Martin Gregorie" wrote in message ... On Wed, 02 Nov 2011 13:18:20 -0500, Paul Remde wrote: I suspect that the iPAQ's battery was low. The hx4700 draws only about 300 to 400 mA when the battery is fully charged. But it can draw well over 1 A when the battery is low. The 302 would probably work fine if you connected the hx4700 to it when the battery was fully or nearly fully charged. I'd agree. I have an ancient iPAQ 3630 which specifies that its 5v connection can draw up to 1.4 amps from a charger or whatever. As it is supposed to run for 3 hours from a full charge and has an 800 mAh battery, that implies that it uses around 270 mA during normal operation. Its also worth remembering that the USB 2.0 spec says a connection should be rated for 800 mA - and there are some devices that will try to draw more than that. However, it would be wise to size the Mio power supply for at least 1.5 amps[1] rather than 0.4 amps because at some point Murphy guarantees you *will* connect the Mio with with an almost fully discharged battery. For what its worth, I bought a cheap 12v charging cable off eBay for my iPAQ and took it apart. The cigar-lighter end contains a very small 12v - 5v converter rated at 1.5 amps. I installed it in a small metal box (these small switch-mode voltage converters may stick out a lot of RF hash) and permanently wired its 12v side to the glider battery. I have lots of bad experiences with those cigar lighter plugs leaping out of the socket for no apparent reason, so wasn't going to risk using one: besides they are very bulky. The iPAQ is long retired, but I'm still using the voltage adapter, which has to date powered the iPAQ 3630, a Garmin GPSII+ and, currently, my Binatone B.350 PNA. [1] or the Mio's rated max input current, whichever is largest. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
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On Thursday, November 3, 2011 10:07:45 AM UTC-4, Dan Marotta wrote:
Disregarding Murphy... Is always a bad idea. It's hard to imagine the Mio using much more than 300 mA. See above. |
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