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.
The discussion revolves around the capability of batteries to provide alternating current (AC) versus direct current (DC). Participants explore the nature of battery output, the use of inverters, and the components involved in generating AC from a DC source.
Participants generally agree that batteries provide DC power and that inverters can convert this to AC. However, there is no consensus on the practicality of certain methods proposed for generating AC directly from batteries, and the discussion includes multiple competing views on the topic.
Some claims regarding the use of specific components and circuits to generate AC from DC involve assumptions about the effectiveness and practicality of these methods, which remain unresolved in the discussion.
This discussion may be of interest to those exploring electrical engineering concepts, particularly in relation to power sources and circuit design.
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?