Will charging my 6500c with a 3.7v and it getting warm be of detriment???
--
J B
Yes it will knacker your battery and could knacker the phone as well......
Keep to the specified voltage when charging.
Regards
So, did Nokia make 5v chargers with a fat plug?
Just been in the loft and I ain't got one!!
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J B
My fat-plugged Nokia charger is 3.7V.
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Helen Vecht
Edgware
USB is 5v - so therefore to be able to charge from USB requires the
phone to need 5v input. Consequently, the chargers for the phones were
5v chargers.
I don't think that Nokia used 5v chargers on devices which didn't have a
USB port.
So, my answer is - I don't think so.
D
Yes, mine too ........... that's what I said previously!! :-)
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J B
You would have to put well over 9 volts into a phone like a Nokia
before you could overwhelm the regulators
Steve Terry
> J B wrote:
> > "John" <1...@321.00> wrote in message
> > news:gvh5kd$afi$1...@news.eternal-september.org...
> >>
> >> Yes it will knacker your battery and could knacker the phone as
> >> well......
> >> Keep to the specified voltage when charging.
> >
> > So, did Nokia make 5v chargers with a fat plug?
> > Just been in the loft and I ain't got one!!
>
> USB is 5v - so therefore to be able to charge from USB requires the
> phone to need 5v input. Consequently, the chargers for the phones were
> 5v chargers.
Easy enough to put a regulator into the cable...in fact I have such a
cable and frequently charge my new-ish Nokia from the USB port on my
monitor...!
--
Bob Eager
Use the BIG mirror service in the UK:
http://www.mirrorservice.org
But, what about lower voltages? V = I x R etc
--
J B
I was hoping to be able to use what I'd bought without alterations!! :-)
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J B
I wasn't suggesting you modify anything - just correcting the
misconception...
I bought the cable really cheap from dealextreme!
Steve Terry
So, why did it get warm???
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J B
It has a voltage regulator in it. If the input voltage is higher than
needed, the regulator reduces it to the correct value. The difference in
voltage doesn't disappear into thin air, but is dissipated as heat. If
the voltage difference is Vd, and the current drawn is I, then
P = Vd x I
which is probably enough to accoutn for the heating.
But ... the voltage is *lower*.
--
J B
Isn't this part of the phone makers' move to a standard charger format?
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Brian
"Fight like the Devil, die like a gentleman."
Perhaps the current limiter in the phone works on measuring and
expecting a voltage drop across the battery which is greater than the
3.7V input and is therefore allowing more current through to try and
get the required drop across the battery for charging?
Seems wierd to me :)
--
Mark
AC-2X 5.3v
Regards
I suspect it gets warm simply because there's more energy available for
charging. Looking at the pile of chargers in front of me:
ACP-12X 5.7V 800mA large pin
AC-4X 5.0V 890mA small pin
Both are 'rectangular'. I also had a 'rounded' charger:
ACP-7X 3.7V 355mA large pin
That would mean it'll charge the battery more slowly, and so produce less
heat. The phone will have a switching regulator for charging the battery
(there's no room for a linear regulator in a small phone as it would need
heatsinking) so it'll adapt to the voltage available.
I think, guessing by the weight, the ACP-7X has a 50Hz transformer in it,
while the others have a switching regulator and a higher frequency
transformer (which can be much lighter). That would agree with the others
being 100-240V while the ACP-7X is 230V only.
I've used all three types interchangeably on phones made in the last 5 years
with no problems. (Except the AC-4X on large-pin phones due to lack of
suitable adaptor).
Theo
> I've used all three types interchangeably on phones made in the last 5
> years
> with no problems. (Except the AC-4X on large-pin phones due to lack of
> suitable adaptor).
So, I've got a collection of 'fat' chargers, ranging from the original one I
had with the 702 (wasn't that a 61XX?) through to the more recent one I had
for the 5140
Which one shall I take abroad on Saturday???? :-)
--
J B
I'd take any that are 100-240V, on the offchance you might be going
somewhere with 110V. These may do better at cleaning up the mains if it's
spiky.
Of course the Right Answer would be to take one with the right mains plug
for where you're going :)
Theo
Sorry, I should have said ........ we're going to the South of France - I'm
fairly certain they are 220/240v and we have an adapter.
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J B
Right, but OP says that the lower voltage charger is producing
__more__ heat.
Thankfully I don't have to worry about this issue :)
Nobody has given a valid reason for why the OP's phone gets warmer with
the 3.7V charger and there should be less energy available for charging
with this charger.
AFAIK the charging voltage for LiIon batteries is 4.2 V so the phone
would need to boost the 3.7V to charge the battery. Seems to me it is a
question of whether a particular model of phone can accept 3.7 to 5.7V
as it's charging voltage.
Ah. It wasn't clear whether the heat was coming from the phone or the
charger.
The 3.7V charger has a linear 50Hz transformer, so is less efficient than
the switched-mode 5.xV models. Therefore the /charger/ may heat up more.
But the 5.xV models dump more power in the phone, so the /phone/ may heat up
more with those.
Theo
<pedant mode>
I said ... <<my 6500c is getting warm whilst charging>> ;-)
> The 3.7V charger has a linear 50Hz transformer, so is less efficient than
> the switched-mode 5.xV models. Therefore the /charger/ may heat up more.
> But the 5.xV models dump more power in the phone, so the /phone/ may heat
> up
> more with those.
But ..... the *phone* is getting warm with the 3.7v charger
--
J B
Further visit to 'the bottom drawer' reveals an ACP-12X (5.7v 800mA)
It's on the phone as we speak and ........... it's cool! :-))
Thanks all, much appreciated.
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J B
Right, so with the correct 5V charger, the phone (somehow) limits
current to have 4.2V charging voltage across the battery. With the
3.7V charger, it cannot measure the 4.2V drop so increases current
(V=I*R) to try to achieve it and allows full current from the charger.
>Right, so with the correct 5V charger, the phone (somehow) limits
>current to have 4.2V charging voltage across the battery. With the
>3.7V charger, it cannot measure the 4.2V drop so increases current
>(V=I*R) to try to achieve it and allows full current from the charger.
Well, it was 1974 when I failed my Physics A level, but I think I understand
what you're saying! ;-)
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J B
LOL ... it's been a while for me too and doesn't mean that I am
right .. but is the only logical explanation I can come up with :)
All the regulation is in the phone and Li-lon battery
anything over 4 and a bit volts and the regulators will be able to do
their job, under 4 volts and it will simply stop charging
Steve Terry
>
>
but is it groovy ? ........
Everything is always groovy here! ;-)
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J B
France, like the UK and the rest of the EU, officially uses 230V +/-10%
mains. If you actually measure it you'll find that French mains are
(still) about 220V and British mains are (still) about 240V, but those
are both well within the 10% tolerance required.
Cheers,
Daniel.
Apologies for resurrecting this thread
I have it all sorted now
An ACP 12X charger with a 'fat' plug on the end then an AC-6 adapter that
connects the charger into the top of my 6500c
Job's sorted!
So ... I thought I'd replicate the 'system'
Bought another ACP 12X charger from 7dayshop.com for �1.99 but now I can't
find an adapter anywhere!
The e bay shop I used before has gone!
Can anyone find where to get a AC-6 *converter* from (*not* an ACP-6X
charger)???
TIA
--
J B
Steve Terry
> Poundland have a USB to phone charger with mutiple end plugs,
> that might do?
> I remember they used to have a hand crank gen with multiple end plugs
> one of which was a thick to thin Nokia
Hmmm
I need thick to 'usb' sort of thingy
--
J B