Solar Powered Wireless Camera

I would like to mount a wireless camera in my backyard (we live in a rural area) to watch the typical wildlife that wonders by. I see tracks for deer, coyotes, raccoons, and others. I plan to get a camera that can see in the dark (infred Camera). Mount it in or near a tree where I've seen the track and have the recevier in my home attached to the TV and a VCR. I've found the camera I want to use. It's small, it works outdoors and it runs on a 9 volt battery. The problem I have is that I don't want to keep changing batteries. I would like to attach a small lawn tractor, ATV, or motorcycle battery (12 volt) to a voltage regulator (dropped to 9 volts) and have a solar panel battery charger attached to the battery. What I hope to accomplish is a self-contained power source for the camera mount on a pole or tri-pod that can be moved is a different spot each week.

Has anyone done something like this and can you give me some advice as to how I can made this all happen? One of my concerns is that the camera will drain the battery completely during the night and the solar panel will not charge the battery completely during the day. I plan to use a Solar Charge Controller to help control the charging of the battery. The camera is spec'ed to use 150ma.

Reply to
robertbbm
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The camera is the cheap wireless camera you find on ebay. It can transmit about 150 ft. Operating in the 1.2 GHz freq.

Reply to
robertbbm

how far is the camera away from your receiver? If it is say a 100yards or so you could use a 433MHz licence free transmitter to turn the camera on and off when you need it.

On a cheap (50?) camera, it was also spec'd at 9V. When I took it apart, I found a 78L05 voltage regulator, which I bypassed, and then ran off 4 AA LiIon cells in series. You might check this out.

If you could do this maybe you could use a 6V lead acid battery and a couple of diodes in series to just drop the V enough

martin

Reply to
martin griffith

snip

4 AA LiIon cells in series.

OOOPs, I meant 4 AA LiMh

martin

Reply to
martin griffith

I got a couple of solar cell battery chargers here:

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They have a dead 6V gel cell battery inside. You can replace the battery and use an upconverter to get the voltage to the level you want. The price for these is really good, $7 plus shipping.

Al

Reply to
Al

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