These look interesting...
http://www.mouser.co.uk/ProductDetail/T ... c%252bU%3d
Digikey have stock:
http://www.digikey.co.uk/scripts/DkSear ... 4248990955
These would work for 3.3v supplies...clocks, usb chip, SATA chip...lots of possibilities
Supercapacitor with more user-friendly voltage
Re: Supercapacitor with more user-friendly voltage
think i got some if them not tested yet
There lithium i believe with a min voltage requirement
Kinda like capatteries
There lithium i believe with a min voltage requirement
Kinda like capatteries
sd card player, modded soekris dac, class a lifepo4 amp or gb class a/b amp, diy open baffle speakers based on project audio mundorf trio 10's
Re: Supercapacitor with more user-friendly voltage
Dang, I'm always in your wake ;-)
Quality safety instructions, heh...
http://www.yuden.co.jp/productdata/cata ... or03_e.pdf
Quality safety instructions, heh...
http://www.yuden.co.jp/productdata/cata ... or03_e.pdf
Re: Supercapacitor with more user-friendly voltage
Yeah, 2.2v...slightly apprehensive to connect them to anything! Might try it on the USB card...limited downside potential ;-)nige2000 wrote:think i got some if them not tested yet
There lithium i believe with a min voltage requirement
Kinda like capatteries
Re: Supercapacitor with more user-friendly voltage
Does anybody know a typical application of these boys?
Re: Supercapacitor with more user-friendly voltage
Well, I'll probably run some tests before I actually connect it to something that matters but my hope is that Nigel's USB card recipe (elsewhere on here) needs a battery supply of 3.3v. I was thinking about sticking one in parallel with the power supply at the card end.
...or any of the 3.3v oscillators that I've replaced on the motherboards, SATA cards, perhaps even the clock board on Ian Canada's FIFO circuit.
Basically my thinking is that they'll act as an output capacitor that is very localised to the load.
Anyone else got any thoughts?
...or any of the 3.3v oscillators that I've replaced on the motherboards, SATA cards, perhaps even the clock board on Ian Canada's FIFO circuit.
Basically my thinking is that they'll act as an output capacitor that is very localised to the load.
Anyone else got any thoughts?
Re: Supercapacitor with more user-friendly voltage
Yea worth a tryCrom wrote:Well, I'll probably run some tests before I actually connect it to something that matters but my hope is that Nigel's USB card recipe (elsewhere on here) needs a battery supply of 3.3v. I was thinking about sticking one in parallel with the power supply at the card end.
...or any of the 3.3v oscillators that I've replaced on the motherboards, SATA cards, perhaps even the clock board on Ian Canada's FIFO circuit.
Basically my thinking is that they'll act as an output capacitor that is very localised to the load.
Anyone else got any thoughts?
I never found much or any difference with the the lenght of wire between the batteries and the device
In fact i often find caps a bottleneck
Trying on an oscillator sounds like a good test
sd card player, modded soekris dac, class a lifepo4 amp or gb class a/b amp, diy open baffle speakers based on project audio mundorf trio 10's