Share a power supply between two devices

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the feasibility of sharing a power supply between a modified Bluetooth speaker and a guitar amplifier. Participants explore the requirements for powering both devices, including voltage and current specifications, and the implications of using a car charger and other power supply options.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant inquires about using the original amplifier's power supply to power both a Bluetooth device and a guitar amplifier, detailing the power requirements of each device.
  • Another participant suggests using a car mobile charger and raises concerns about the efficiency of the charger and the overall power consumption when running both devices in parallel.
  • A different participant proposes measuring the overall power consumption to determine if the original power supply can suffice or recommends obtaining a power supply with a higher rating for safety.
  • One participant mentions replacing the Bluetooth device with a lower power device that consumes 80mA, questioning if this would be suitable for the amplifier's original power supply.
  • There is a discussion about the specific voltage requirements for the new device, with one participant expressing uncertainty about finding a suitable power supply that outputs 3.7V at 80mA.
  • Another participant clarifies that using a power supply with a higher current rating than needed (e.g., 3A for an 80mA device) is acceptable, as the load determines the current drawn.
  • Participants discuss the use of voltage regulators or converters to step down the voltage from the amplifier's power supply to meet the requirements of the new device.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express varying opinions on the adequacy of the original power supply and the best methods to power the devices. There is no consensus on whether the original power supply can be used without issues, and multiple approaches to solving the power supply challenge are presented.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight the importance of efficiency and power ratings, noting that assumptions about power supply capabilities should be approached cautiously. There are also discussions about the potential for unregulated supplies to deliver higher voltages under light loads.

TechTree
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Hello, I have recently converted an old bluetooth speaker into a Aux input device for a guitar amplifier. You can see how I converted it here. So now I'm trying to power both the bluetooth device and the guitar amplifier using the original amplifier's power supply.

Here is the power that each device requires:
Bluetooth device = 5v DC 500mA
Guitar amplifier = 12v DC 1A

Would it be possible to use the original amplifier's power supply to power the bluetooth device as well? If I connected the bluetooth device to a 5v 500mA car charger taking an input of 12v. Then just connected the car charger to the output of the amplifier's power supply? Would I also need to upgrade the guitar amplifier's power supply to 1.5A?

Many thanks. :wink:
 
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A car mobile charger sounds like the right way to go.

Will you run both the guitar and the charger in parallel? If so (and if the charger is only 50% efficient) you need 12*1+5*1=17 watts rather than 12 watts from the power supply.

It is impossible for us to say if that will fry your power supply. Do you have any nameplate info on the power supply separate from the guitar's needs?
 
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You can either properly measure the overall power consumption to determine the actual power requirement (and it can be within the original 12V 1A limit) or you can just get a 12V PSU with 1.5A rating (what is a very safe and conservative approach).

Usually the PSU ratings has a decent reserve to the requirements so there is a chance that the original PSU will still suffice, but blindly assuming something like this is not engineering o0)
 
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Thanks for the replies! I have replaced the bluetooth device I'd like to power in parallel with the guitar amplifier with a device that consumes much less power, just 80mA now rather than 500mA. I'm guessing a device which uses that little power should suffice being powered by the amplifier's original power supply.

I'm just slightly unsure where to find a PSU that takes an input of 12V (from the amplifier's PSU) and outputs 3.7V 80mA? It just seems too specific.

Thanks! :wink:
 
TechTree said:
Would it be possible to use the original amplifier's power supply to power the bluetooth device as well? If I connected the bluetooth device to a 5v 500mA car charger taking an input of 12v.
Yes, that should work. I have a similar setup powering my 12V telescope, several 12V accessories and a 5V USB hub.
Then just connected the car charger to the output of the amplifier's power supply? Would I also need to upgrade the guitar amplifier's power supply to 1.5A?
Is that an external power supply? Does it have a nameplate that says 1.5A output and the amplifier has its own nameplate that says 1.5A input? It *might* work...worst case you overheat and burn out the power supply. But you can buy 3rd party 12V power supplies pretty cheap:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01GD4ZQRS/?tag=pfamazon01-20

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01461MOGQ/?tag=pfamazon01-20

Heck, I probably have half a dozen from discarded electrical devices in a box somewhere...
 
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russ_watters said:
Wait, where did the 3.7V come from - you said 5V before?
Sorry if I made it unclear, but I replaced the device I was wanting to power with a much lower power device instead, hence 3.7v 80mA rather than the 5v 500mA device.

The 3.7V device used to be battery powered and used a 80mAh battery and lasted for about an hour. If I use a power supply with the same voltage will it only take what it needs? Even if the power supply can offer 3A and I'm using just 80mA?
 
TechTree said:
Sorry if I made it unclear, but I replaced the device I was wanting to power with a much lower power device instead, hence 3.7v 80mA rather than the 5v 500mA device.

The 3.7V device used to be battery powered and used a 80mAh battery and lasted for about an hour. If I use a power supply with the same voltage will it only take what it needs? Even if the power supply can offer 3A and I'm using just 80mA?
You just need a linear / or switching regulator off the 12V line to step it down to 3.7V

DC-DC switching buck converter, one just like this and dirt cheap, you couldn't build it for that price

https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Waterproof-DC-to-DC-buck-Converter-12V-to-3-3-3-3-7-5-6-9V-Power-Module-Supp-IL/173574617102?hash=item2869da780e:m:mpIvE4dqDG0KizqVMAqe8xw
Dave
 
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TechTree said:
Even if the power supply can offer 3A and I'm using just 80mA?

Yes. The load determines the amount of current. As long as the power supply can supply at least enough current then everything should be fine.

Please note that for unregulated supplies you may get a larger voltage than expected at very light loads.

BoB
 
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