Solide state charger 12V. Lighting up 230V bulb.
Loading...
27,299
Loading...
Uploader Comments (valllhalla)
see all
All Comments (19)
-
@shimondoodkin Thanks
-
Very Nice project is that a 555 Timer chip that your using there?
I to would like to see the schematic but like qinaan said the link dont work :( Thank you for sharing Thums up!!! Regards Steve
-
My email is qinaan@yahoo.com
-
Hi Friend. Great work. Would u like to email me your schematic. coz the link u provided is no more available. Thanks in advance.
-
great job man :D
Loading...
This transformer is made for 50-60Hz and that will be it's optimal frequency. If you want to run high frequencies, you'll need a ferrite core and multi-filar windings. As-is, that is a cool circuit and well laid-out. Great job bro!!!
Landotter1 6 months ago
@Landotter1
Thaks for the tip Landotter1
one day we'll make it
valllhalla 6 months ago
Well I tried higher frequency of the timer and it doesn't work as well. I blame the fact that the bigger the coil is (as in the length x cross-area x purity of the copper wire) the larger the current and the time needed to saturate the coil. All resistances also add to this equation. My best results involve near-1kHz frequencies with 16-filiar coil with wire length approx 150ft each on a solid state model.
TheRadiastral 11 months ago
@TheRadiastral Good for you.
valllhalla 11 months ago
I wonder what would happen if one uses even higher freq chip. Any reason this could not go into MHz range and charge like mad?
TheRadiastral 1 year ago
@TheRadiastral
Good idea!!
valllhalla 1 year ago