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Posts: 191 | Thanked: 9 times | Joined on Nov 2005
#7
Originally Posted by bhima
The design I'm working on will probably use two AA batteries. Two of them give you 2.4v at ~2000 mAh. Pretending your conversion to 5v is 100% efficient, that gives you around 960 mAh. That means you can draw 960 milliamps for one hour. Let's say our conversion is 70% efficient - it will likely be better, but that's a lower bound. That works out to be 672 mAh.

If we're powering a 100mA device, which is the most that low power USB devices draw, that's over 6 hours.

Modern switched-mode conversion can be done with one chip, one inductor, two capacitors, and maybe a diode and/or a resistor or two - a very small circuit. IMHO, it's really the direction to go if you're interested in portability. If you have a low power device and don't need too much battery life, you could even bring it down to a single cell.
And I thought my design was getting complicated But yeah, a little switched mode type converter running on two cells would be very cool. I did consider using AA cells instead of AAAs but then I figured huge capacity wasn't really necessary. Why have the USB power supply capable of lasting a lot longer then they 770 would last. When I plug in my 770 to recharge at night I can also plug in my USB battery pack. To tell the truth I don't even imagine using it much. It is just something interesting to play with.

The batteries I am using are 900mAH just so you know. One thing I have noticed though is when messing about with my USB drive they seemed to go flat way faster than they should. I need to do some more tests and measure the current at the battery rather that on the USB device. It shouldn't be much more of course but something funny is going on. There might be some bug in my design I think.