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2009-12-14
, 19:49
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Posts: 126 |
Thanked: 47 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ San Francisco
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#12
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2009-12-14
, 20:07
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Posts: 147 |
Thanked: 42 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#13
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I'm a little confused about this all, so sorry in advanced if I'm needing a second explanation. But I read a few posts back that the n900 charger cannot handle 100v or 240v? I'm going to Australia next week and I read that it uses the 240v, does that mean I shouldn't use my US charger there with an adapter?
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2009-12-15
, 10:36
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Posts: 3,841 |
Thanked: 1,079 times |
Joined on Nov 2006
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#14
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2009-12-15
, 10:55
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Posts: 365 |
Thanked: 98 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#15
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Tags |
220v, charger, europe, european, international, n900, transformer, united states, usa, voltage, volts |
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@Nexus7: No, that's not correct. There is a transformer there, it's just that it's smaller. That's the major point of using a switch-mode charger: You can use a much smaller transformer.
A switch-mode charger works by first converting AC to DC, then chopping up the DC to a high frequency AC again (that's the 'switch' part), then transforming this high frequency AC to a low voltage AC, then finally converting to DC (5 volts, in this case).
The size of the transformer is proportional to the frequency: A 50Hz (or 60Hz, in the US) transformer needs a lot of iron. Increase the frequency and you can reduce the size and the amount of iron. Very small switch-mode power supplies/chargers are simply switching to a very high frequency, thus the transfomer can be made extra small.
N800/OS2007|N900/Maemo5
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