RE: commodore plus 4 power supply... big and heavy...

From: Didier Derny <didier_at_aida.org>
Date: Sat, 7 Apr 2012 23:12:15 +0200
Message-ID: <000501cd1503$1bf57a10$53e06e30$@org>
Hi

I modified an old dlink router switching power supply with a square
connector,
It works wonderfully.

I found there connector there:
http://a4000t.com/store/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=204 
Not exactly the same but, it works after I removed the center pin.

Thanks

--
Didier


-----Message d'origine-----
De : owner-cbm-hackers@musoftware.de
[mailto:owner-cbm-hackers@musoftware.de] De la part de Gerrit Heitsch
Envoyé : samedi 7 avril 2012 21:33
À : cbm-hackers@musoftware.de
Objet : Re: commodore plus 4 power supply... big and heavy...

On 04/07/2012 09:28 PM, Didier Derny wrote:
> Thanks for the information
>
> I'll adapt a small power supply with a plus4 connector And store the 
> old one

Make sure the new supply is a regulated 5V supply. To work properly and not
damage the Plus/4, the voltage needs to be +5V +/-5% (4.75V - 5.25V).

  Gerrit


>
>
> -----Message d'origine-----
> De : owner-cbm-hackers@musoftware.de
> [mailto:owner-cbm-hackers@musoftware.de] De la part de Gerrit Heitsch 
> Envoyé : samedi 7 avril 2012 18:05 À : cbm-hackers@musoftware.de Objet 
> : Re: commodore plus 4 power supply... big and heavy...
>
>
>>
>> any idea of the use of the 9v unregulated ? (indicated on the
>> schematics) and of 9v ac (I just found 9v ac on the user port...)
>>
>> what happened if the 9v ac is not connected ?
>
> The tape recorder will not run. If you want to find out if there are 
> any other effects with the setup you use, remove the large glass fuse 
> inside the plus/4. That has the same effect as if 9V AC are not present.
>
>
>> any idea for a replacement of the power supply (switching power
supply)...
>
> Any power supply that will give you +5V at 1.5A or better should do.
>
> Something like the power supply with the article number 350 696 at 
> www.pollin.de should do the trick.
>
> Do not go above 4A or so because if you develop a short on the plus/4 
> board somewhere, the power supply will happily supply all the power 
> needed to burn the circuit board instead of just shutting down.
>
>    Gerrit
>
>
>         Message was sent through the cbm-hackers mailing list
>
>
>         Message was sent through the cbm-hackers mailing list
>
>


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Received on 2012-04-07 22:00:10

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