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#11
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Cigarette Lighter Adapter- Cessna 172
"RST Engineering" wrote: I don't mean to be pedantic... LOL |
#12
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Cigarette Lighter Adapter- Cessna 172
B A R R Y wrote: On Fri, 04 Aug 2006 07:15:03 GMT, Grumman-581 wrote: Even though I've never smoked, I don't want to give up my lighter plug in my aircraft or any of my cars... I use them for too many other gadgets that I don't want to do without... Many new cars include multiple outlets. It would make a lot more sense to include a 110V ac outlet (using an inverter) instead of the 12V/24V plug. That way you can use the standard wall connector and not have to worry about carrying special adaptors. |
#13
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Cigarette Lighter Adapter- Cessna 172
RST Engineering wrote:
I don't mean to be pedantic, but you can't "transform" a DC voltage; transformers only work on AC. Do they use a center tap on the battery or a regulator? If they use a regulator, it had damned well better be a hefty one to take the slug of current that a cigarette lighter draws. Jim Only if it is indeed a cigarette lighter and not just a cylindrical 12V power outlet. My plane has the latter (it just has a plastic cap on it). I would blow the breaker if I tried to stick a cigarette lighter in there. |
#14
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Cigarette Lighter Adapter- Cessna 172
Andrew Sarangan wrote:
Do people really smoke cigarettes while flying? The DE who gave me my private checkride smoked a pipe while flying. The ashtrays in the planes pretty much showed that someone else in the right seat used to smoke (my flight instructor was a smoker, but he never smoked while instructing to my knowledge). |
#15
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Cigarette Lighter Adapter- Cessna 172
"Andrew Sarangan" wrote It would make a lot more sense to include a 110V ac outlet (using an inverter) instead of the 12V/24V plug. That way you can use the standard wall connector and not have to worry about carrying special adaptors. Do you have any idea how much power that would require, and the cost of the inverter for a good sized, powerful laptop computer? With the inefficiency of most inverters, at least 1000 watt, and the price goes into hundreds of dollars. -- Jim in NC |
#16
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Cigarette Lighter Adapter- Cessna 172
On Thu, 3 Aug 2006 20:05:39 -0700, "RST Engineering"
wrote in : If they use a regulator, it had damned well better be a hefty one to take the slug of current that a cigarette lighter draws. That would be about 10 amps if it's similar to an automobile. |
#17
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Cigarette Lighter Adapter- Cessna 172
Morgans wrote: "Andrew Sarangan" wrote It would make a lot more sense to include a 110V ac outlet (using an inverter) instead of the 12V/24V plug. That way you can use the standard wall connector and not have to worry about carrying special adaptors. Do you have any idea how much power that would require, and the cost of the inverter for a good sized, powerful laptop computer? With the inefficiency of most inverters, at least 1000 watt, and the price goes into hundreds of dollars. -- Jim in NC I have an inverter that I bought for $19.99. It has a 150W contunuos power rating. It runs my laptop just fine. Why do you need 1000W? |
#18
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Cigarette Lighter Adapter- Cessna 172
It would make a lot more sense to include a 110V ac outlet (using an inverter) instead of the 12V/24V plug. My Toyota has both! G How many watts, or amps? -- Jim in NC |
#19
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Cigarette Lighter Adapter- Cessna 172
"Andrew Sarangan" wrote:
Morgans wrote: Do you have any idea how much power that would require, and the cost of the inverter for a good sized, powerful laptop computer? With the inefficiency of most inverters, at least 1000 watt, and the price goes into hundreds of dollars. -- Jim in NC I have an inverter that I bought for $19.99. It has a 150W contunuos power rating. It runs my laptop just fine. Why do you need 1000W? If the expectation is that the inverter is terribly inefficient (say ~10%) I could see it needing to draw 1000 W DC to produce 100 W AC. But I believe they are generally 80% efficient or better - otherwise they'd fry themselves. Laptops aren't supposed to be very power hungry - even my floor standing "tower" computer (excluding my CRT monitor) typically draws under 100 W AC (I used a portable power meter to measure the power draw of my computer equipment to size the UPS I needed for my home office). |
#20
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Cigarette Lighter Adapter- Cessna 172
Morgans wrote: "Andrew Sarangan" wrote It would make a lot more sense to include a 110V ac outlet (using an inverter) instead of the 12V/24V plug. That way you can use the standard wall connector and not have to worry about carrying special adaptors. Do you have any idea how much power that would require, and the cost of the inverter for a good sized, powerful laptop computer? With the inefficiency of most inverters, at least 1000 watt, and the price goes into hundreds of dollars. What? I have a 150 watt inverter that works just fine for recharging/running laptops, PDA's, cell phones, etc. It's an all in one unit, no separate cord and device. About $20 at Walmart. |
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