What kind of voltages / max currents do you generally run your gels at? I am designing a power supply.
--A
Dedicated gel power supply would be sweet!I think 120V at 250mA is pretty common
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Jeez. Yea.
To spill the beans on my current plan (I will have schematics/parts avalible for discussion later), I am working on a cheap, high quality diybio gel supply. Will it get done? Hopefully. Will it have a sweet lasered box? Probably. It may not be totally adjustable though, that is Tbd.
--A
Thanks for the replies by the way. I appreciate it.
I run at fixed current, 75V for 20-25 minutes (fresh, and larger gels)
and 50V for 35-45 minutes(older gels that were stored in 4C before
using).
d suggests a combo power supply and meter
to hook up to your gel trays. That would defeat s
From what I've read constant current means constant migration speed, but as electrolysis occurs the resistance goes up and more heat is generated. Constant voltage means as resistance goes up due to electrolysis, current goes down and so does migration speed, but heat stays low.
Why does it drop?
Cooled rigs exist for more exotic applications. I saw a few surplus ones somewhere.
--A
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msg/diybio/-/sFy27ec-GYwJ.
te material, electrons can move already through crystalline
pathways that get knocked a
On 12/10/2012 12:20 PM, Nathan McCorkle wrote:
But the gel isn't a conductive crystal, it's a dielectric matrix. Current flows only because of the electrolyte.
On Mon, Dec 10, 2012 at 9:06 AM, John Griessen <jo...@industromatic.com <mailto:jo...@industromatic.com>> wrote:
te material, electrons can move already through crystalline
pathways that get knocked a
Reread what I said in context.