Posts: 909
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Joined: Jan 1970
Tony Duell said there are two versions of the rechargable pack - one has a voltage regulator that applies no more than 6 volts to the NiCads, the other just has a limiting resistor and would produce a higher voltage if the NiCads opened up. Since the NiCads are soldered in, there isn't the same risk of an open circuit as in the Spice and Woodstocks. But what I have considerd doing (haven't done it yet), since my rechargable pack, which I got in non-working order, has the voltage regulator, is to use the pack without NiCads just to run the calculator from the line, as you suggest. My pack has a rectifier, filter cap, a TO-92 12 volt (I think) regulator, a resistor, and a 6 volt zener diode. Adding some large electrolytic caps, maybe some approximately 1 farad "supercaps", in place of the NiCads might even keep the memory without AC for some time (if you are very careful not to turn on the calculator!)
Posts: 4,027
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Joined: Aug 2005
Hi;
I have a full-nut that came with the golden-spheres contacts (say, a pair of golden-plated spheres with one golden-plated spring each,built with a rubber "holder" (?); these are built in the two little holes inside the charger tunnel). I read that these allow the 41 to be powered by an AC/DC converter. I also noticed that the holes are available in the newer half-nut's, but they are dummy (say, no contacts for the AC/DC converter available at the mainboard).
Getting Aruid's requests, I would like to know if anyone have already used these contacts. I remember (sometime ago, in the past 80's) I connected an external battery pack (four 1.5 A-size batteries) to read a bunch of cards. Successfull. But I don't remember the polarity...
Maybe this is more usefull.
Cheers.