hello! voltage-boosting DC/DC converter to charge laptop

This forum is all about circuits and components.

hello! voltage-boosting DC/DC converter to charge laptop

Postby Asad Saeed Khan on Sun Feb 14, 2010 12:17 am

Hi All,

I want to use my computer/laptop in the car without using up the car battery to save energy and weight by using high tech switchmode DC converters (car cords). This travel laptop adapter is a voltage-boosting DC/DC converter designed to power or charge a notebook computer from an automobile power point or cigarette lighter. Is there anyone has seen the circuit diagram and its description??? If yes then please send me.

Thanks and regards.

Asad Saeed Khan.
I am Asad Saeed Khan. I am a Computer Engineer and my interest is to work on Hardware Interfacing Projects,Designing Of Embeded Systems and working on Microprocessors and MicroController based Projects and also automation.
Asad Saeed Khan
 
Posts: 40
Joined: Sun Mar 14, 2004 7:19 am
Location: Karachi, Pakistan

Re: hello! voltage-boosting DC/DC converter to charge laptop

Postby Tomi Engdahl on Mon Feb 15, 2010 9:11 am

Elektor Electronics magazine used to publish such circuit years ago.
The downsides of that circuit would be that it was pretty low powered (30W or so if I remember right) and could not be enough for many modern PCs (considerably lower power than the commercially available similar power supplies nowadays advertise). Most modern laptops can draw 30 to 40 watts just sitting there at a desktop! With a low battery that's being charged, while the laptop is on and running, they draw considerably more (could be 80-100W or so). For example the Dell laptop I use at works has power supply that gives out 20V 4.51A and the laptop says power rating 20V 4.5A. This means the laptop can use up to 90W power.

It might not be economically feasible to try to build such circuit, cheap commercial converters are so cheap nowadays that it pretty hard to even just to get the electronics components for such circuit with the same price, and to get working unit you would still need the circuit board, case and lots of building/testing...

Check for example this is pretty cheap (I have not tested but site gives mostly good comments):
Car Cigarette Lighter Universal Laptop Power Adapter: $12.76
http://www.dealextreme.com/details.dx/s ... r.85273703
Tomi Engdahl
Site Admin
 
Posts: 1839
Joined: Mon Oct 20, 2003 6:15 pm
Location: Espoo, Finland


Return to Circuits and Components

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests

cron