MisterBill2
- Joined Jan 23, 2018
- 27,523
Certainly that is correct. Most consumer electronics is designed to work with the range of mains voltages normally experienced.that depends on that how endpoint devices are designed, correct? thx
Certainly that is correct. Most consumer electronics is designed to work with the range of mains voltages normally experienced.that depends on that how endpoint devices are designed, correct? thx
yeah but the worst thing is its stated nowhere in manual. Maybe only option to contact manufacturer.Certainly that is correct. Most consumer electronics is designed to work with the range of mains voltages normally experienced.
That is not mentioned because just like data sheets, very specific values are difficult to reproduce exactly. AND, it would confuse a lot of people who would not even understand.yeah but the worst thing is its stated nowhere in manual. Maybe only option to contact manufacturer.
IF the device being powered is a computer, that 1 volt drop may not matter.@MisterBill2 bc of 1V drop.
Consider that the actual computer system logic uses either 5volts, or more likely 3.3 volts, although if there is an LCD color screen there are other voltages also used. My small computers also have a 12 volt battery pack. So the 19 volts is regulated down by switcher power supplies.@MisterBill2 i was not aware of that , ie a computer can sustain 1v drop. Its computer yes.
@MisterBill2The TS has just described to the rest of us exactly the reason why we do not have DC voltage distribution wide spread in most buildings. Having long wires for power delivery past the rectifiers and regulators and filters leaves an uncertain voltage drop in the wires. Certainly that drop is a problem that many folks choose to avoid.
OK, not the resistance but still, it could be the inductive reactance causing a problem. Or even being a resonant length. ALSO, consider the added cost of the heavier wire. It might also be an inadequate connection someplace in the circuit.@MisterBill2
because i used 1mm2 core,
i changed to 6mm2 core and i cant measure with voltmeter drop... so apparently its not about drop but something else...