Batteries help please
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- twilightprincess
- Posts:367
- Joined:Sat Feb 17, 2007 12:28 am
- Location:Western Australia Gender: Male
Hey guys.
Iv'e read Daguy's battery information in his guide, But I was wondering what is the recommended battery to use. I need one that can charge from the wall, and dont say anything about radioshack, I live in Australia.
Iv'e read Daguy's battery information in his guide, But I was wondering what is the recommended battery to use. I need one that can charge from the wall, and dont say anything about radioshack, I live in Australia.
Last edited by twilightprincess on Mon Jun 11, 2007 4:09 am, edited 1 time in total.
- usbcd36
- Posts:1293
- Joined:Sun May 15, 2005 5:04 pm
- Location:Inside Samus's arm cannon [gulp]___ Gender: Male
One possibility is to get Ni-MH AA-sized rechargeables and battery holders. Wall chargers for these are easy to find, and you can usually get both batteries and charger in a single package. The disadvantage is that an N64 takes 7.5v, so you'll need at least 6 or 7 batteries. Since cheap chargers only do 4 at a time, this requires you to have two chargers, or a more expensive, more capacious charger.
If that sounds complex…well, this is more complex…
You could also go the route that Ben went in some of his portables and use lithium-ion batteries from cameras. You use the camera to charge the battery, then you slip it into the portable for playing. The internal protection circuit keeps it from exploding, so there's little risk of bodily harm. It's cheaper if you have the device already, but if you don't, it's expensive to get a camera/camcorder, or even just a battery and standalone charger.
If that sounds complex…well, this is more complex…
You could also go the route that Ben went in some of his portables and use lithium-ion batteries from cameras. You use the camera to charge the battery, then you slip it into the portable for playing. The internal protection circuit keeps it from exploding, so there's little risk of bodily harm. It's cheaper if you have the device already, but if you don't, it's expensive to get a camera/camcorder, or even just a battery and standalone charger.
- twilightprincess
- Posts:367
- Joined:Sat Feb 17, 2007 12:28 am
- Location:Western Australia Gender: Male
Thanks but I'm still not sure, all of the prices are really expensive. I was wondering if there is anything I could use from this page here. (remember these are Australian prices)
- twilightprincess
- Posts:367
- Joined:Sat Feb 17, 2007 12:28 am
- Location:Western Australia Gender: Male
most of those batteries are SLA, nicd or AA nimh batteries.
the general feeling around here is that you shouldn't use AA batteries for a n64 portable, a bunch of people have had issues with not enough power being available. battery life would suck anyways.
the general feeling around here is that you shouldn't use AA batteries for a n64 portable, a bunch of people have had issues with not enough power being available. battery life would suck anyways.
"Linux is only free if your time is worthless"
- twilightprincess
- Posts:367
- Joined:Sat Feb 17, 2007 12:28 am
- Location:Western Australia Gender: Male
- twilightprincess
- Posts:367
- Joined:Sat Feb 17, 2007 12:28 am
- Location:Western Australia Gender: Male
Get a dvd player battery that's 7.2v-8.4v. Those have built in chargers and protection circuits so all you have to do is give it the voltage it says on the case and it charges safely. NiMH or LiPo are good, but don't get nicad because they die after much less charge cycles than the others and have lower power density. DVD player batteries also tend to have pretty high capacity and if you don't like the capacity of the built in batteries, you can replace them with batteries of the same type but higher capacity and it'll still work with the charger. That's what I did and my portable is probably one of the easiest to charge from either a wall adapter or a car plug.
protection circuits arent designed to let you carelessly charge your battery. you can still blow it up pretty easy, the protection limits are usually outside of the standard "safe" zones.
you should be using some kind of semi-intelligent charger. and definitely not an unregulated power source.
you should be using some kind of semi-intelligent charger. and definitely not an unregulated power source.
"Linux is only free if your time is worthless"