Yes... now you and some time ago mister @Danko suggested the same thing with the ATX PSU. I have 3 of them and one with a very few wires on it, but working. I will have to test them because I dont know what I have there anymore. Ok then, thats my beating horse ! Very good idea, both of you.Do you have access to an ATX power supply or a car battery in decent shape?
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Alright, I prepared an OK ATX PSU, only that I cut it's very long wires, and now it has a couple left, enough to do my experiments. I dont need all its output wires, only 2 or 3. I actually used this particular ATX PSU to power an old monitor that was having very thin and long neon tubes in it, right before LED monitors era. That PC monitor, it's black brick, I put something on top of it and it got so hot that it burned out. Leaving it in air alone, it powered my monitor fine for years. So I go with it in my hand to a electronic repair shop. And after 2 weeks, that guy call me and give me the new brick power supply. I go happy home, I power the monitor, and until the night, that new power supply got dead - without me putting anything on it because I learned my lesson. I even open it up and put holes in its plastic case for more cooling. Very quickly I realized that electronic engineer was a complete idiot. The original PSU that burned, was 4A probably. And this new one was 1A. Thats how I understood why it burned so fast. But that guy also give me a hint, because I was young and I didnt got in the habit to measure everything, I was an adolescent what can you ask from me back then. But I observed the voltage was 12V on that new PSU that burned in a couple of hours. So, I sacrificed this ATX PSU which was a weak one, 230W compared to my current one of 400W in my PC. But very good for powering my monitor. And guess what? It worked just fine. For another couple of years !!! in this configuration. That monitor neon back light got extremely yellow-orange, probably in 8 or 10 years of daily use and abuse. It was my very first thin monitor - before I had those big CRT monitors, I actually had a 21 inch diagonal CRT monitor (for artists). Hehehe. Yes, this is the history of this particular ATX PSU ! Now you will love it as much as I do.
This 4:3 type of monitor, only that one I had was 4 or 5 fingers thick, not 2 fingers or even 1 finger thick as the modern LED monitors are now.

The conclusion is that I was forced to learn electronics because I was surounded by idiots !---
I think is a good idea to post it's label.

I first look in the top-right corner where it says PS-230WB so that tells me is a 230W PSU.
But... in that table is a range of watages, and they mention some "voltage selector". I believe this PSU can be tweak to higher Wattage. But I have no idea from where. It might be dumbed down for commercial reasons? Hmmm.
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