power supply male jacks?

I need an AC power supply for an analog 5 watt telephone. Are the different sizes and colors of male power jacks fixed to specific power levels as an agreed on industry standard? That is, if a male jack fits my phones' female power input, do I have a match for power needed and power supplied?

Reply to
datakoll
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No, there is nothing even remotely standard about those damn consumer "coaxial power" connectors. Make sure that the nameplate voltage and current on the unit and the wall wart match.

--scott

--
"C'est un Nagra.  C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
Reply to
Scott Dorsey

No. It would be nice, but whatever standardization may exist definitely can't be counted on to keep from frying components. You should not just check specs closely, but then re-check with a DVM or VOM to be sure you're safe. Unregulated wall-wart supplies are almost uniformly over-voltage, depending upon the load of what's being powered to bring them into the right voltage range.

The jacks, by the way, are the holes; the male things are plugs.

--
St. John
Reply to
St. John Smythe

Except when the jacks have a male pin inside a hole and the plugs, which go into the hole with the male pin, just has holes. We have gender uncertainty issues here.

Steve King

Reply to
Steve King

And make sure the polarity is correct, also. Not clear by "AC power supply" whether you mean one that can be plugged into the wall, or whether you meant that the phone actually uses some AC voltage? Of course, if the phone uses AC, then you have no concern about polarity.

Radio Shack actually has a reasonable selection of different wall-wart power supply units, and they have a "universal" system where you can buy the coaxial connector separately. They have ~50 different plugs on a big ring at the shop where you can bring your phone and find the one that fits. (BOTH the inner pin diameter, AND the outer barrel diameter.)

Reply to
Richard Crowley

if radio shack sez the unit supplies x amps and z volts then the buyer is reasonably certain this will be true? a level of maybe performance at a reasonable price?

Reply to
datakoll

I would be satisfied. Note that if the PS can deliver more current than the gadget needs, no harm, no foul. However, this does *NOT* apply to voltage!

Reply to
Richard Crowley

Typically unregulated (at least the universal model), so at lower-than-spec'd current draw from the device being supplied this means that the voltage will tend to swing up. How much depends on the actual load; whether this causes a problem or not will also depend on the device being supplied.

If you're not in a rush and don't mind spending a few dollars more, you might look at the regulated wall warts available from Mouser, Digikey, etc. (RS might have such entities, but be prepared to pay way more than they're worth.) Nice clean power, held pretty close. (Of course, if your device wants AC, don't do this.)

If you do go the mail order route, the same general comments apply regarding polarity; you'll also want to get the right barrel size. Many different size steps there.

Frank Stearns Mobile Audio

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 .
Reply to
Frank Stearns

So, what's a 'jackplug' then ? LOL !

Graham

Reply to
Eeyore

Just to muddy the waters........

A DC adaptor will often work fine with an 'AC' input.

But you need to know what you're doing.

Graham

Reply to
Eeyore

I might be tempted to call it androgenous, certainly not bisexual since it doesn't "go both ways".

rd

Reply to
cross I'd

While the overwhelming majority of these things may be center pin positive _DO NOT_ make this assumption. This falls into the "double check" category if you're going to use a generic or universal replacement PS.

rd

Reply to
cross I'd

Particularly as many units lack reverse-polarity protection. And not only cheap gear. Give a Sony Walkman Professional reverse polarity and you're instantly in for a repair bill. Unbelievable, unforgivable but true.

Reply to
Laurence Payne

"Eeyore" wrote in message news: snipped-for-privacy@REMOVETHIS.hotmail.com...

And to further muddy them - some equipment that has computing chips and audio chips (eg an effects unit) that require an AC supply will boot up fine if you use a DC supply, but will have no audio. This is because the 5 volts required for the digital stuff will be generated OK but the plus and minus supplies for the audio will not.

Gareth.

Reply to
Gareth Magennis

Roland and Yamaha use opposite polarities to each other. Do not assume anything. Ever.

Gareth.

Reply to
Gareth Magennis

Sounds a little hermaphroditic.

-- St. John You should never bet against anything in science at odds of more than about 10^12 to 1. -Ernest Rutherford

Reply to
St. John Smythe

A plug that goes into a jack.

Reply to
Laurence Payne

I came across a fingerprint scanner that had that kind of problem once.

Graham

Reply to
Eeyore

Are you sure it's not a male jackelope?

Reply to
T Shadow

IME, yes.

RS just has their wall-warts custom made by some of the usual suspects. They tend to be about average quality, which is true of just about everybody else.

Other good sources include Jameco.

Reply to
Arny Krueger

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