Re: power supply

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Author: mike havens
Date:  
To: Main PLUG discussion list
Subject: Re: power supply
I figured out why it is called a 'brick'... compared to the rest of the
computer it is 'dumb as a brick'! Hardy har-har.....

On 10/19/09, mike havens <> wrote:
>
> Thanks for the tutorial. It was very informative! I took the battery out
> the moment you told me to test that . So far no crashes but I've had it go
> days without crashing so I suppose it is just a wait and see type of thing.
>
> On 10/19/09, Jim March <> wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, Oct 19, 2009 at 8:03 AM, mike havens <> wrote:
>>
>> > so the prick is the power supply? Thanks for the help.... I am so
>> thankful I
>> > found you guys. You all are so helpful and friendly.
>>
>>
>> Well mostly :). OK, here's how power management really works in a laptop.
>>
>> The "brick" turns AC wall power into DC. I just picked up a Dell
>> brick off my floor, it's putting out 19.5v DC. That's the main power
>> supply, what most people just call "the power supply". Like most of
>> these bricks, my Dell brick can take in foreign-spec AC (220v at 50
>> cycles) in addition to US-spec.
>>
>> Once DC gets into the laptop, a much much smaller DC-to-DC power
>> supply turns it into 12v, 5v and usually 3.3v or so. Sometimes 2.8v.
>> It's very, VERY uncommon for that part to break, because it's not
>> under as much stress. The reason the main power supply (AC-to-DC
>> "brick") is external at all is because it heats up from the amount of
>> work it does...and because they blow up a lot, the makers want to be
>> able to quickly swap them with no screwdriver involved. By the time
>> power gets all the way into the laptop past the brick, a lot of the
>> "heavy lifting" power conversion is already done by the brick. The
>> laptop is being spoon-fed something very easy to digest.
>>
>> If the DC-to-DC internal power supply blows, you're screwed - it's
>> part of the motherboard most of the time. But you're also having an
>> astonishingly unlucky day if that happens, I've never seen it myself.
>>
>> There's one more circuit involved: the "battery charge controller".
>> This takes DC in and spoon-feeds it in and out of the batteries,
>> detecting when the batteries are full and chopping power when they
>> are. Good ones slowly back off the power as it gets close to full.
>> That circuit is built into the battery pack itself, so swap batteries
>> and you swap that. The laptop can run without it, and if that charge
>> controller goes bonkers it can cause problems such as you're having.
>> Hence as a test run it without the battery, eliminate that as an
>> issue.
>>
>> The reason you have the charge controller in the battery is to allow
>> different capacity battery packs. You can order three different
>> grades of battery off of Dell for example for my laptop, and each will
>> have different charge controller settings for their respective
>> internal battery arrays.
>>
>> That's how laptop power works.
>>
>> Desktop power supplies are simpler: they take AC in, put out the
>> various DC types the system needs. Even then most motherboards will
>> have a small DC-to-DC power supply on board to feed very clean and
>> precise stuff to the CPU and in many cases vary the CPU voltage under
>> software control.
>>
>>
>> Jim
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>
>
>
> --
> :-)~MIKE~(-:





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:-)~MIKE~(-:
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