glbeas said:Now I'm looking at that lens. It uses a 4.5v 650 mAh battery to power the shutter. I have some small AA battery holders that will mount on the back of the board out of sight I could wire into it as a replacement and also mount a toggle switch to kill the power and save the battery life. I need to know what value of load resistor I should put inline to keep the current from the AA's down so the shutter coils don't get burnt. The AA's run about 2000-3000mAh each. I don't know what formula needs to be applied to find the right values. Do I need to measure the current the shutter draws during operation to work this out? Do we have a kindly electrical engineer out there who can help?
Thats pretty much the case with your average equipment but when you are dealing with the fine coils in an electronic shutter you have to take the batterys internal resistance into consideration. If the coil was designed for a certain battery supplying x milliamps of current it might not have enough resistance in the coil to handle a battery that delivers 4x the current and may burn out. I found a resistor of several hundred ohms and tried it out and seems to work fine with it as a ballast resistor. Thanks!Bob F. said:This is a bit late so you probably already have an answer, but FWIW: the mAh rating describes the capacity of the battery - nothing to do with the actual current it supplies: that is dependent on the load. In this case, the 4.5V battery's 600mAh rating says it will supply 600mA for one hour, or 60mA for 10 hours, or 6mA for 100 hours etc. If the voltage is correct for the coils, then you do not need to add any resistance.
3 x AA batteries will supply a nominal 4.5V so that seems fine (rechargeable cells have a lower voltage - typically 1.2V each - but may still work depending on the internal circuitry). I assume that you are simply going to solder leads from the external battery to the existing battery terminals on the shutter? If so, that's all you need to do: you are simply supplying the voltage it is expecting - just make 100% sure you have the polarity correct.
Cheers, Bob.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?