MartyO
Well-known member
I need a twelve volt power supply that I can plug in to a 110v outlet that will let me power car headlights.
Thoughts? Suggestions??
Thoughts? Suggestions??
a quick search of amazon.com turned up about 1000 options. for head lights you will need a pretty stout one. i notices a 30a version on there for about 40 bucks.
Why not get a battery charger / jump starter. Should be able to power most anything you need.
Tom
What are these lights for? If for decorating and you don't need all that light, get lights that takes bulbs and putting lower power bulbs in them.
The lights will run fine on AC as was said, however they pull roughly 4 amps each so that would require an fairly hefty/expensive transformer rated for about 16A@12V or 200W.....FWIW the lights could also be wired in a series parallel combination to run on a 24V transformer (or even all 4 in series on a 48V transformer)....anyway around 200 watts and maybe about $40-60 in any case.
If you don't want them at full brightness a wimpier lower voltage transformer would work, the bulbs don't pull nearly as much current then.
I kind of want the dimmer, aged out look.
PC power supply won't work. Most don't put out a lot of current at 12v.
I did not see the one you pointed to.
I saw this one:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B007D6BHWE/?tag=atomicindus08-20
I would modify the headlight to accept something else such as LED. I wouldnt want bright lights in my face all the time. Just want the effect without the affect.
If you don't want them at full brightness a wimpier lower voltage transformer would work, the bulbs don't pull nearly as much current then.
You'd be surprised. Tungsten filaments have an unusal VI curve where it's really steep at low voltages and almost flat at higher voltages. A 10 to 25% voltage drop gives a very small current drop.
Before semiconductors, light bulbs were often used in electronic circuits to take advantage of that effect.
Am aware of the non linear relationship, though even if current remained the same the power requirement would then drop off as the voltage, i.e. 25% less at 9V vs. 12V. Since I was curious how a headlight conducts at reduced voltage (and am slightly nerdy ;-) and had everything I needed on hand (a HL, a HL socket, a variac, and 2 DMM's) I decided to experiment and the results are below.
Also took a photo of the bulb at 6 volts and since the OP is looking for a dimmer decorative effect that would probably do the trick and a 80W 6 V transformer is only about $28 (4 bulbs would require about 60W @ 6V)
http://www.mouser.com/catalog/catalogusd/647/2287.pdf
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Holy smokes! I knew I should have paid more attention in science class!!
THANKS!!!!!