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#51
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Jim Vincent wrote: wrote in message oups.com... That is just pure nonsense (the up vs down part). You can buy a 30W (15V @ 2A) dc-dc converter for $62 from Mouser (search for UHE-15/2000-Q12). The description says the input is 24V, but it really is 9-36V, which should cover just about any battery you want to come up with. The thing is 88% efficient and occupies 1.5 in^3. You can buy lower power ones even cheaper. If that makes your 14V heart feel better, go for it (it won't damage your radio). Tom Seim 2G DG-400 Get one of these for $45 and it will take your 12 V input and upconvert it to 14V, handle 2A and be about 83% efficient. http://www.dimensionengineering.com/AnyVolt.htm I wish I had been available two years ago when I built my own 13.9V upconverter. This looks like a hobbyist product that would have to put into an enclosure before using in a glider. What I found is a commercial dc-dc converter that is in volume production from a company that has an established reputation. It is also a much smaller package, has over-voltage protection & short circuit protection, and meets all specifications at -40 C. I doubt that the other unit has even been tested at anything but room temperature. The level of testing and quality assurance that a company like Datel has to offer should not be underestimated. Tom Seim 2G DG-400 |
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#52
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Paul Remde wrote:
Hi, It is my belief that all the work required to make an "upconverter" will lead to only minimal increases in your radios transmit power (10 to 20%?). It doesn't seem worth it to me. I vote 12V. Even a 30% power output increase would yield only about 15% range increase, so if one is otherwise happy with the radio's performance, I agree. It might let you operate the radio for a longer time off the same 12 volt battery, if the radio isn't working satisfactorily below, say, 11.8 volts or so. If so, a $45-$60 converter would be a lot cheaper than a new radio, easier and cheaper than trying to squeeze in a 2 volt cell and buying a 14 volt charger to go with it, or fumbling with a handheld when the panel radio quits. As Dave K. suggests, noise from the switcher is a potential concern, but I believe an external unit like the ones mentioned shouldn't be a problem. We already have one or more switchers without problems in our gliders to run the Ipaqs and transponders, and transceivers are well shielded. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
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#53
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"Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... Jim Vincent wrote: wrote in message oups.com... That is just pure nonsense (the up vs down part). You can buy a 30W (15V @ 2A) dc-dc converter for $62 from Mouser (search for UHE-15/2000-Q12). The description says the input is 24V, but it really is 9-36V, which should cover just about any battery you want to come up with. The thing is 88% efficient and occupies 1.5 in^3. You can buy lower power ones even cheaper. If that makes your 14V heart feel better, go for it (it won't damage your radio). Tom Seim 2G DG-400 Get one of these for $45 and it will take your 12 V input and upconvert it to 14V, handle 2A and be about 83% efficient. http://www.dimensionengineering.com/AnyVolt.htm I wish I had been available two years ago when I built my own 13.9V upconverter. Did you use it with your glider transceiver? How has it worked out, and do you have any problems with noise in the receiver from the converter? -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA Eric, I have not used the one I reference here. I have only used the one I built. It has worked fine.I have not experienced any noise issues. My premise for adding this to my ship is for the rare situation when the battery is near death and I need to make an emergency transmission. I flip one switch to make the GPS and Palm Pilot run off their own internal batteries and flip another to activate the upconverter. BTW, I have a third switch that selects either the main battery or a small backup battery dedicated to the GPS secure data logger for badge purposes. |
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#54
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wrote in message oups.com... Jim Vincent wrote: wrote in message oups.com... That is just pure nonsense (the up vs down part). You can buy a 30W (15V @ 2A) dc-dc converter for $62 from Mouser (search for UHE-15/2000-Q12). The description says the input is 24V, but it really is 9-36V, which should cover just about any battery you want to come up with. The thing is 88% efficient and occupies 1.5 in^3. You can buy lower power ones even cheaper. If that makes your 14V heart feel better, go for it (it won't damage your radio). Tom Seim 2G DG-400 Get one of these for $45 and it will take your 12 V input and upconvert it to 14V, handle 2A and be about 83% efficient. http://www.dimensionengineering.com/AnyVolt.htm I wish I had been available two years ago when I built my own 13.9V upconverter. This looks like a hobbyist product that would have to put into an enclosure before using in a glider. What I found is a commercial dc-dc converter that is in volume production from a company that has an established reputation. It is also a much smaller package, has over-voltage protection & short circuit protection, and meets all specifications at -40 C. I doubt that the other unit has even been tested at anything but room temperature. The level of testing and quality assurance that a company like Datel has to offer should not be underestimated. Tom Seim 2G DG-400 Tom, my guess is the product is built with off the shelf components that are more than adequate for our purposes. If I was to get one, I would pull the display and Amp/Volt switch and mount them on my panel. The rest I would put in a standard Radio Shack enclosure, drilled out for cooling/venting purposes. Regarding Datel, do you think they're in compliance with MILSPEC-1540B and have been fully vibe/shock/thermal tested....I doubt it. Great that you found another vendor, but please don't dis a vendor because they cater to hobbyists. Dimension Engineering caters to radio control aircraft, which as you surely know experience diverse environments. If their reliability was bad, they'd be out of business in no time...s**t listed too on every newsgroup. I'm sure either vendor would work just fine. |
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#55
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Paul Remde wrote: Hi, It is my belief that all the work required to make an "upconverter" will lead to only minimal increases in your radios transmit power (10 to 20%?). It doesn't seem worth it to me. I vote 12V. I agree. 14V seems to be a magnificent solution to a non-existent problem. ![]() This summer I was sitting on an airport ramp after 8 hours in the air and talking to glider pilots 200 miles away - on a single '12V' - 7.5 AH SLA battery that was 2 years old. The battery still showed 12.5 V while transmitting. I do get the impression that newer SLA's perform better than those sold a few years ago. It's pretty clear that newer radios work much better on lower voltages. Taken together, it's hard to see what improvements are needed. If I ever see the need for more power, I'll replace it with a 12 AH version and not fool with two batteries and an 'A-B" switch. I'll replace the 7.5AH before next season even if it seems to be working fine. My regimen is to make sure the battery goes on a very good charger right after each use where it remains under trickle charge until I need it again. I never leave a battery partially charged. Bill Daniels |
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#56
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If the battery is near death will it provide the current required by
the upconverter? It's not magic and you can't get more power out of the upconverter than you put in. I'm curious to know if you have measured the performance with a "battery near death"? An upconverter can't solve the available capacity problem. It can only make it worse. (About 15 percent worse for the referenced converters). They seem to be of no value except for powering equipment that will not operate properly unless the available voltage is increased. My prefered solution for emergencies is to have a handheld tranceiver with an alkaline battery pack. |
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#57
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"Andy" wrote in message oups.com... If the battery is near death will it provide the current required by the upconverter? It's not magic and you can't get more power out of the upconverter than you put in. I'm curious to know if you have measured the performance with a "battery near death"? An upconverter can't solve the available capacity problem. It can only make it worse. (About 15 percent worse for the referenced converters). They seem to be of no value except for powering equipment that will not operate properly unless the available voltage is increased. My prefered solution for emergencies is to have a handheld tranceiver with an alkaline battery pack. Haven't tested near death, but actually was part of the thinking. If the battery is near death, it has a little juice left. If the radio would not tolerate a low voltage, then I could upconvert. Other part was optimizing the power demands of the Dittle FSG-50 radio and Cambridge vario. Found no real difference in performance between 12V and 13.9. And yes, I do recognize the power losses. |
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#58
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I do this stuff for a living, and have over 30 years experience. In
that time I have developed methods and instincts for evaluating vendors (after you are burned a few times you get to be really careful). First, I have been using Datel products for 30+ years and have a real comfort zone with them. Second, I read the data sheet (which you can also do). Except that you can't do that with Dimension Engineering because there isn't one! Now, that is a major red flag in my book (maybe not yours). And don't assume that just because somebody is selling something that it works as advertised. That is, perhaps, the silliest thing you said. If you want a MIL SPEC qualified dc-dc, they are available too. Try Vicor. You'll just pay A LOT more. The Datel unit is known as COTS (for commercial off the shelf). I said that it looks like a hobbyist product, and it does. Since when is that *DISSING* anybody? Furthermore, what I was saying was that it was MADE by hobbyists. That are lots of well designed commercial products FOR hobbyists, but that is not the situation here. I stand by my original comments and would recommend for the Datel unit and strongly against the Dimension Engineering. You, of course, are entitled to your own opinion. Tom Seim 2G DG-400 |
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#59
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wrote in message
ups.com... I do this stuff for a living, and have over 30 years experience. In that time I have developed methods and instincts for evaluating vendors (after you are burned a few times you get to be really careful). First, I have been using Datel products for 30+ years and have a real comfort zone with them. Second, I read the data sheet (which you can also do). Except that you can't do that with Dimension Engineering because there isn't one! Now, that is a major red flag in my book (maybe not yours). And don't assume that just because somebody is selling something that it works as advertised. That is, perhaps, the silliest thing you said. If you want a MIL SPEC qualified dc-dc, they are available too. Try Vicor. You'll just pay A LOT more. The Datel unit is known as COTS (for commercial off the shelf). I said that it looks like a hobbyist product, and it does. Since when is that *DISSING* anybody? Furthermore, what I was saying was that it was MADE by hobbyists. That are lots of well designed commercial products FOR hobbyists, but that is not the situation here. I stand by my original comments and would recommend for the Datel unit and strongly against the Dimension Engineering. You, of course, are entitled to your own opinion. Tom Seim 2G DG-400 I'll be sure to keep this in mind the next time I buy a radio control system from Futaba or JR or any of the other well known vendors in radio control space that provide receivers, motors, batteries and other flight critical devices used in radio control aircraft. In my thirty years of radio control aircraft, I can think of very few, if any, devices that have not worked as promised. Oh yeah, very few of them have data sheets. At what point does a company mature from a start up to what you consider a bonafide COTS? Oh, just because a product was made by hobbyists, it is not as legit as one made for hobbyists? Your critical thinking skills sure are sharp...note the sarcasm here, Tom. I am glad your instincts and methods were so correct in determining DE's reliability and suitability. I guess I just have to rely on my ten silly years of testing, system engineering and integrating aerospace critical rocket gear and thirty years of fooling around with silly radio control toys as my baseline in evaluation skills. I also rely on the Internet community as an excellent near realtime feedback mechanism on radio control products; if a product does not work as promised, the company gets slammed. In the context of how you used the tem "hobbyist," I am very comfortable saying you were dising it. Taking your comment that this is the "silliest thing" I've said, you're implying that the other things I've said were silly as well, just not as silly. Well, thanks for your succinct evaluation and critique. I now know that if I need the final authority on what is valid and what is not, I'll just go to you. |
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#60
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My, my. Are we getting a little testy here?
Actually, if you to Futaba's website you will find extensive data sheets on their products. Futaba is, clearly, not garage shop opertion. If you want to put something in your glider built by a garage shop hobbyist, go right ahead. I will continue to be critical and not recommend that course of action. I, too, am entitled to MY opinion. Tom |
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