โApr-26-2018 06:48 AM
โApr-28-2018 03:51 PM
โApr-28-2018 12:25 PM
โApr-27-2018 05:04 PM
westend wrote:My main problem is finding ones that stay on. The lights pull so few amps that the pack thinks the phone stopped taking a charge.Most 120V to USB charging bricks are continuous voltage at 5V. Alternatively, there are 5V transformers readily available. Also, all ATX computer power supplies output 5V through one power lead.
For a 6' LED light strip, I'd power it with the trailer's 12V system. Should be almost unlimited reserve power for a small LED strip and you won't need anything else in the circuit except a fuse and a switch.
โApr-27-2018 03:23 PM
My main problem is finding ones that stay on. The lights pull so few amps that the pack thinks the phone stopped taking a charge.Most 120V to USB charging bricks are continuous voltage at 5V. Alternatively, there are 5V transformers readily available. Also, all ATX computer power supplies output 5V through one power lead.
โApr-26-2018 07:01 PM
โApr-26-2018 06:41 PM
DrewE wrote:chartle wrote:
My plan is to avoid tapping into the 12v and use 5v strips with small phone chargers. Though I might in the one where the radio is since I have 12 volts already there.
How do you plan on powering your 5V phone chargers? Or do you mean those external battery pack thingies that need recharging from time to time?
If you don't want to run new wires, there are any number of battery powered stick-on LED lamps available from all sorts of places. For instance, American Science and Surplus sells these and these others, Ikea has these and the others, and so on.
โApr-26-2018 06:21 PM
chartle wrote:
My plan is to avoid tapping into the 12v and use 5v strips with small phone chargers. Though I might in the one where the radio is since I have 12 volts already there.
โApr-26-2018 05:43 PM
โApr-26-2018 12:19 PM
โApr-26-2018 10:24 AM
โApr-26-2018 07:22 AM
โApr-26-2018 07:16 AM