Thanks for the advice, but I'm willing to take the risk. Carrying
around a few hundred pounds of batteries is not my idea of portable
computing... my bicycle trailer is going to be full enough with 10
gallons of water plus my camping gear.
On Feb 1, 3:03 am, <hapt...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
all i can say us DONT mess with the charge terminal. most laptop
batteries
have highly integrated charge/drain monitoring circuitry that will get
TOASTED if you try to defeat it.
u are far better off stocking up on ten or so extra correct battery
packs.
or get a bonified ac adapter that inserts in same place as battery pack.
they are not just batteries anymore, they are power systems all inside
the
plastic.
alternately, use a few charged 12vdc car batteries, a 12vdc to 120 vac
inverter and a standard dell 120vac adapter. yes, its ugly but you
might
get a few good weeks of performance from the setup

)
"jcomeau_ictx" <john.com...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1170199188.138700.324370@l53g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
Hi, I want to be able to run my Dell Inspiron 600m using a custom-made
external 18V battery pack at next year's Burning Man. And I can do
this, but the internal battery will not charge from it without that
3rd, inner conductor of the triaxial cable carrying some unknown
signal. I don't have an oscilloscope any more, and would rather not
have to buy one. Has anyone hacked into this and knows what's being
sent over that 3rd conductor, so I can rig a circuit to emulate it?
Googled and found nothing. Thanks -- jc