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July 26th, 2006, 13:21 | #1 |
220V Charger Adapter
Hi,
I was wondering if a simple adapter from radioshack ("the source" by circuit city), would be able to allow a 220V plug to stick into a 110V outlet and be able to charge a battery without harming it. Do I just need the adapter or would I have to get a converter (or both)? If the latter, I'll just buy a quick charger instead...those converters are quite pricey. Thanks, ModerateSniper |
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July 26th, 2006, 13:41 | #2 |
Delierious Designer of Dastardly Detonations
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: in the dark recesses of some metal chip filled machine shop
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depends very much on the device you are using. Some power supplies have automatically switchable input voltage. Some have a switch on the outside. If it's a basic brick charger, you're probably out of luck if the name plate states an input voltage of 220v only as they use fixed ratio transformers.
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July 26th, 2006, 13:56 | #3 |
It is a basic charger.
On the label/name plate it states: Input: AC 220V 50/60Hz Output: DC 8.4V 250mA So I take it that not stating 110V as well would mean that its input voltage is only 220V? Thanks for the help MadMax! EDIT: Update for anyone that cares, I'm going to order the "BB Bastard NiCad/NiMH Advanced NPT Battery Charger" tomorrow when I get paid. Otherwise I'd waste $60 on a converter for a very slow charge time. Thanks again :cheers: |
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