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#1
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On Apr 13, 7:40*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote:
I assume Dave's earlier comment about power consumption of USB to SD card adapters referred to some of the larger desktop style ones, the typical small SD to USB small adapters like my SanDisk MicroMate or SimpleTech Bonzai draw very low currents. I don't have my USB breakout cable handy or I'd measure the currents but I know it is low. Darryl I have a small converter that looks like a normal USB memory stick, with a tiny slot in the end for a uSD card (I use this for turning in FLARM log files). The combo (adapter plus uSD card) draws 100ma, which is the max our adapter sources. What it needs all that power for I have no idea... Your mileage may vary ! Best Regards, Dave PS: In windows device manager, switch to connection view, and you can see the USB current for each connected device. No need for breakout cables... |
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On Apr 13, 5:21*pm, Dave Nadler wrote:
On Apr 13, 7:40*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote: I assume Dave's earlier comment about power consumption of USB to SD card adapters referred to some of the larger desktop style ones, the typical small SD to USB small adapters like my SanDisk MicroMate or SimpleTech Bonzai draw very low currents. I don't have my USB breakout cable handy or I'd measure the currents but I know it is low. Darryl I have a small converter that looks like a normal USB memory stick, with a tiny slot in the end for a uSD card (I use this for turning in FLARM log files). The combo (adapter plus uSD card) draws 100ma, which is the max our adapter sources. What it needs all that power for I have no idea... Your mileage may vary ! Best Regards, Dave PS: In windows device manager, switch to connection view, and you can see the USB current for each connected device. No need for breakout cables... You don't need to be in connection view do you? Anyhow this does not work in a virtual machine like I am running. My God, people still run Windows on native hardware? I keep mine locked tightly is a safe container on the shelf and only open it when needed. Darryl |
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On Apr 13, 8:49*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote:
I have a small converter that looks like a normal USB memory stick, with a tiny slot in the end for a uSD card (I use this for turning in FLARM log files). The combo (adapter plus uSD card) draws 100ma, which is the max our adapter sources. What it needs all that power for I have no idea... Your mileage may vary ! Best Regards, Dave PS: In windows device manager, switch to connection view, and you can see the USB current for each connected device. No need for breakout cables... You don't need to be in connection view do you? Its the easiest way to find the hub controlling your device, which is where you need to look at the power. Anyhow this does not work in a virtual machine like I am running. My God, people still run Windows on native hardware? I keep mine locked tightly is a safe container on the shelf and only open it when needed. Depending on *which* virtualization scheme you are using and its USB support, it may work. USB doesn't work in free VirtualBox for example... Darryl |
#4
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Dave Nadler wrote:
On Apr 13, 7:40 pm, Darryl wrote: I assume Dave's earlier comment about power consumption of USB to SD card adapters referred to some of the larger desktop style ones, the typical small SD to USB small adapters like my SanDisk MicroMate or SimpleTech Bonzai draw very low currents. I don't have my USB breakout cable handy or I'd measure the currents but I know it is low. Darryl I have a small converter that looks like a normal USB memory stick, with a tiny slot in the end for a uSD card (I use this for turning in FLARM log files). The combo (adapter plus uSD card) draws 100ma, which is the max our adapter sources. What it needs all that power for I have no idea... Your mileage may vary ! Best Regards, Dave PS: In windows device manager, switch to connection view, and you can see the USB current for each connected device. No need for breakout cables... I opened Device Manager, located my USB memory stick in the USB controller list, opened Properties, but don't see power or current listed in any of the tabs. The Generic hub did have a Power tab, but it showed the requirement for the attached device (auxiliary display), not actual current. Can you be more specific on which USB to look at, and where in the Properties? -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me) - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Feb/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://tinyurl.com/yb3xywl |
#5
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On Apr 13, 11:03*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote:
Dave Nadler wrote: On Apr 13, 7:40 pm, Darryl *wrote: I assume Dave's earlier comment about power consumption of USB to SD card adapters referred to some of the larger desktop style ones, the typical small SD to USB small adapters like my SanDisk MicroMate or SimpleTech Bonzai draw very low currents. I don't have my USB breakout cable handy or I'd measure the currents but I know it is low. Darryl I have a small converter that looks like a normal USB memory stick, with a tiny slot in the end for a uSD card (I use this for turning in FLARM log files). The combo (adapter plus uSD card) draws *100ma, which is the max our adapter sources. What it needs all that power for I have no idea... Your mileage may vary ! Best Regards, Dave PS: In windows device manager, switch to connection view, and you can see the USB current for each connected device. No need for breakout cables... I opened Device Manager, located my USB memory stick in the USB controller list, opened Properties, but don't see power or current listed in any of the tabs. The Generic hub did have a Power tab, but it showed the requirement for the attached device (auxiliary display), not actual current. Can you be more specific on which USB to look at, and where in the Properties? -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me) - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Feb/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarmhttp://tinyurl.com/yb3xywl Start with "View by Connection". Locate the USB hub controlling your device. Look at properties, power tab... This shows the max current negotiated (max to be provided by USB host), not the instantaneous actual current. Hope that helps, Best Regards, Dave |
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