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Digest Number 790 — Parallax Forums

Digest Number 790

ArchiverArchiver Posts: 46,084
edited 2001-08-10 18:44 in General Discussion
It was actually a radio shack standard 12 foot cigarette lighter adapter
extension cable. I'm going to cut some of the length of it and add a relay
switch in the middle so that should solve the problem...


I would suggest that you make sure you have the correct polarity at
your inverter and that 12V is in fact present, if you extended the
cigarette lighter adapter wiring yourself by splicing into it. The
length of a piece of wire does have an impact on how much current can
flow through it. The longer the piece of wire is, the more resistance
it has, hence less current can flow. However you have to have ALOT of
wire for this to really come into play.

I'd look for more obvious causes...Polarity reversal, bad connection,
shorted wiring, blown fuse inside the cigarette lighter part, blown
fuse in the vehicles fuse panel, etc., epsecially if you made the
modifications yourself. Length of wire would be the last thing I look
at unless you just extended it from 8 feet to 800.


--- In basicstamps@y..., "Christopher Bergeron"
<christopher_bergeron@y...> wrote:
> Does anyone know why extending an automobile DC power wire
(cigarette
> lighter adapter specifically) would cause an AC/DC inverter to not
work?
> Can the length of a wire affect how much current flows through it?
(I use a
> basic stamp 2 in my application, and I figured this group hosts the
wisest
> of the wise...)
>
>
> Here's a link to my application (Dashboard PC):
> http://christopher.bergeron.com/
>
> for those interested...
>
> Thanks in advance for any info about this!
> -CB
>
>
>
>
> _________________________________________________________
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