mherna48
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I was just thinking about batteries and such after my brother asked me about AC vs DC current and their pros and cons.
turbo-1 said:If you are willing to buy a DC-AC inverter, you can get AC in remote locations using DC batteries. I use one of these to power my telescope AC drives from the cigarette lighter of my vehicle. If you need smooth sine-wave AC you should know that these little inverters give you pretty notch-ey square-wave AC. Plugging my mount into real AC results in smooth quiet operation, but the 60-cycle buzz is noticeable when operating off the inverter.
No idea. I bought that little box about 15-20 years ago. My only requirement was that it put out 60 hz AC so I could run my drives.Starwatcher16 said:Does your inverter advertise itself as a modified or pure sine wave inverter?
An "inverter" converts DC to AC. A Toyota Prius has DC batteries but supplies high frequency AC to the motor. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverter_(electrical )mherna48 said:So there's absolutely no way to get batteries to make AC right? Or has it just not been tried?
vk6kro said:To supply AC from DC, you usually have to make an oscillator.
An oscillator produces AC from DC. The AC can then be used in a transformer to change the voltage of the AC.
See the following circuit:
http://www.elecfree.com/electronic/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/circuit-inverter-100w-by-ic-4047-2n3055.jpg
This starts with DC and produces a much higher AC voltage suitable for small AC appliances.
The part marked 4047 oscillates and produces outputs which drive big power transistors which then drive the transformer.
mherna48 said:That's really cool. What does IC 4047 stand for and what is that VR 250K component coming out of pin 2?