On Tuesday, June 23, 2015 at 11:42, Marc Verdiell wrote:
> Thanks David.
You're welcome.
> I might put NiMH batteries instead
That may not be advisable, given the continuous constant-current trickle
charger in the CPU power supply. The Panasonic "Nickel Metal Hydride
Technical Handbook"
Thanks David. My go to place for batteries is http://www.all-battery.com/.
They are in the Valley, very cost effective, associated with Tenergy I
believe. I receive my batteries in one or two days usually. Always had very
good luck with them, and they have all possible cells in all possible grades
On Monday, June 22, 2015 at 11:44, Marc Verdiell wrote:
> Now if I can find similar cells I will be able to reconstruct the pack
> inside the same shell.
Ni-Cds are still available from Allied Electronics, Mouser Electronics, and
others, although they are declining in availability compared to a
And I opened the pack up, and you are 100% right! It's just a plastic shell
containing 10 big C-size cells, 3.5 A.hr each, indeed from the time period
it must be NiCd! Now if I can find similar cells I will be able to
reconstruct the pack inside the same shell. It will even look like the
original.
On Sunday, June 21, 2015 at 16:43, Marc Verdiell wrote:
> On this machine the battery connectors are just two pronged, + and -,
> so no thermistor connection apparently.
That marks it as an "A-version" power supply.
> I just need to find new small 12V lead batteries that fit.
Note that the "
too tall.
Marc
--
Glen Slick said:
Subject: Re: HP 2113e Battery resistor
I have only looked at the "B" version of the power supply as that is
what I have in my 2117F. (Now that I think of it I'm not sure what
version of the power supply I have in my 2113B). The details fo
I have only looked at the "B" version of the power supply as that is
what I have in my 2117F. (Now that I think of it I'm not sure what
version of the power supply I have in my 2113B). The details for that
are covered in the 5061-1356 section of the 92851-90001_Jun79_9.pdf
manual referenced below s
Ah thanks, this is what these are for, thermistors. They are supposed to
monitor the temperature somewhere I suppose? Attached to the batteries? The
power supplies? The computer won't start without these I understand? Sorry I
am a bit of a newbee with HP 1000's. Have not tried to power mine quite y
I've got some pins that appear to be the right size from when I was making
battery packs (electric R/C) that I plan to solder to the resistor with a
little bit of heat shrink on each leg to keep from starting fires or other
exciting things from happening. A sorta kludge. I remember using these
st
BTW, are you building your own plug with the ~820 ohm resister? For
now I just have something kludged up with dangling wires attached to a
resister and no proper pins and plug housing. When I looked for the
correct plug housing in the past it seemed that part was no longer
available for purchase th
Perfect. Thanks Glen.
On Fri, Jun 19, 2015 at 8:37 AM, Glen Slick wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 19, 2015 at 6:10 AM, pdaguytom . wrote:
> > Need help with my 2113e, can someone take a look at their 1000 series
> that
> > using the 820ohm resistor on the battery input and tell me which pins to
> > shun
On Fri, Jun 19, 2015 at 6:10 AM, pdaguytom . wrote:
> Need help with my 2113e, can someone take a look at their 1000 series that
> using the 820ohm resistor on the battery input and tell me which pins to
> shunt? Looking at the plug on the rear of the machine there are nine holes
> arranged 3x3.
Need help with my 2113e, can someone take a look at their 1000 series that
using the 820ohm resistor on the battery input and tell me which pins to
shunt? Looking at the plug on the rear of the machine there are nine holes
arranged 3x3. I've found TerraHertz's tear down and he shows the shunt
pl
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