Hi
Not too long ago I bought a Dell XPS M1730 laptop to do some filming with on location. Knowing that the battery on the system would last about 5 minutes I decided to get someone to build a battery pack that would power the laptop for a lot longer. The power supply rating on the XPS is as follows:
INPUT 100-240V~4A 50-60Hz
OUTPUT 19.5V ---11.8A
The power rating on my new battery packs is 20V 9Ah and they are NiMhd batteries which, although are heavy, are suitable for taking around the World with me on planes. I use two of these batteries at the same time and these power the laptop fine. However, when I turn on the laptop I get the classic Dell error message that tells me that the AC Power Adapter type cannot be determined and that the battery will not charge. I'm not using the internal battery (I've removed it to cut down on weight) but the other problem is that the system is not running at optimum efficiency because the Laptop detects that the Dell power supply is not plugged in. Having read numerous forums and articles (including this: http://www.laptop-junction.com/toast/content/inside-dell-ac-power-adapter-mystery-revealed ) I discovered that the central pin on the psu cable contains a signal from the power supply, which tells the laptop whether the power supply is a Dell one or not. I need to be able to replicate this signal somehow and put it between my battery packs and laptop and I'm not sure how to do it or if there is anyone out there that can do it for me.
One idea is obviously to use the existing power supply and just put a DC/AC converter in the chain between the battery packs and psu. However, this would increase the weight of the total system, which is already quite heavy, so I'd like to avoid that route if possible. Another option would be to buy a new laptop that doesn't have to use its own power supply to run at optimum efficiency, but then that would cost me a lot of money. I could also buy another dell power supply, strip it apart, take the uniqueware out and try and fit that into the chain.
Any ideas would be much appreciated.
Many thanks in advance
Not too long ago I bought a Dell XPS M1730 laptop to do some filming with on location. Knowing that the battery on the system would last about 5 minutes I decided to get someone to build a battery pack that would power the laptop for a lot longer. The power supply rating on the XPS is as follows:
INPUT 100-240V~4A 50-60Hz
OUTPUT 19.5V ---11.8A
The power rating on my new battery packs is 20V 9Ah and they are NiMhd batteries which, although are heavy, are suitable for taking around the World with me on planes. I use two of these batteries at the same time and these power the laptop fine. However, when I turn on the laptop I get the classic Dell error message that tells me that the AC Power Adapter type cannot be determined and that the battery will not charge. I'm not using the internal battery (I've removed it to cut down on weight) but the other problem is that the system is not running at optimum efficiency because the Laptop detects that the Dell power supply is not plugged in. Having read numerous forums and articles (including this: http://www.laptop-junction.com/toast/content/inside-dell-ac-power-adapter-mystery-revealed ) I discovered that the central pin on the psu cable contains a signal from the power supply, which tells the laptop whether the power supply is a Dell one or not. I need to be able to replicate this signal somehow and put it between my battery packs and laptop and I'm not sure how to do it or if there is anyone out there that can do it for me.
One idea is obviously to use the existing power supply and just put a DC/AC converter in the chain between the battery packs and psu. However, this would increase the weight of the total system, which is already quite heavy, so I'd like to avoid that route if possible. Another option would be to buy a new laptop that doesn't have to use its own power supply to run at optimum efficiency, but then that would cost me a lot of money. I could also buy another dell power supply, strip it apart, take the uniqueware out and try and fit that into the chain.
Any ideas would be much appreciated.
Many thanks in advance