jixxerbill said:
well answers were kinda helpfull, let me tell u what I am doing it might help. I am copper plating my cast lead bullets with a solution of copper sulfate, it workes really well so far but i can't afford to keep buying d batteries.. so i guess i need to figure out how many amps its taking to do the work then buy an adapter that's rated at least that high or higher ? thanks for responses and sorry for the electrical ignorance on my part.
No worries. How long (in hours) do the D cell batteries last when plating?
As stated, batteries are rated in their energy storage capability, which is Amp*hrs (* voltage). To keep it "simple", the units used are Amp*hrs (even though the units of energy are Joules in the main metric system used).
Anyway, to figure out what current the batteries are running at, you would take the Amp*hr rating, and divide by the number of hours the setup can run before discharging. That gives you a ballpark estimate of the current that it is running at for that time.
The voltages of the two batteries add in series, which is why you get about 3.3 to 3.0V with fresh alkaline D cells. The current is the same in both batteries since they are in series -- you are just getting twice the energy by virtue of twice the voltage (Power=V*I, Energy = Power * time).
It looks like 12,000mA*hr (or 12 Amp*hours) is a typical D-cell alkaline capacity:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_battery_sizes
So if your plating works for 2 hours on the D cells, then your setup is probably running at about half of 12 Amps, or 6 Amps. If it runs for 12 hours of plating, then your current is likely around 1 Amp.
Makes sense?