I have purchase a TFT Monitor **broken link removed**.
The main reason of purchasing this monitor is in order to attach it to my Canon XM2 Camorder AV output and be able to see better the picture instead of the LCD display of the camcorder.
The only problem is how to attach a small battery to the monitor for power. This TFT uses 8 watts and 12 Volts.
I have solved the problem but another has risen. i have connect the TFT Screen (12V 8W) with a 12V 2.8Ah battery. The screen looks fine but after 5 seconds, the screen goes white and then starts blinking. Am I doing something wrong?
I have solved the problem but another has risen. i have connect the TFT Screen (12V 8W) with a 12V 2.8Ah battery. The screen looks fine but after 5 seconds, the screen goes white and then starts blinking. Am I doing something wrong?
The 12V 2.8Ah battery voltage has gone done to 8.6V so that is why the screen is blinking. This battery is connected to a 7”TFT Screen consuming power of 12V 8W. TheTFT screen is always switched off but still connected with the battery. Now the battery has gone down to 8.6V and used only for a few minutes and cannot believe that the TFT screen has consumed so much power?
There is no way that the TFT screen would flatten a battery like that in minutes. All the power that the screen takes is converted into heat. (OK, a tiny amount becomes light and sound but that is less than 1%). If there was that much heat, something would melt.
It sounds like the battery started flat, or it is at the end of its life.
Even though your 7" TFT screen is switched off, it may still be drawing 30mA or more from the connected 12V 2.8Ah battery causing it to slowly discharge.
I have a pinhole camera 8V 200MA and I am attaching a 9V battery (square one). The camera after some minutes is a bit hot. Is the 9V battery too much for the camera?
I have a pinhole camera 8V 200MA and I am attaching a 9V battery (square one). The camera after some minutes is a bit hot. Is the 9V battery too much for the camera?
It might be too much, but I don't think so. If the camera is supposed to take 200 mA at 8 V then the power will be 1.6 W so it will get warm. That might not be a problem at all.