Battery Packs for X-10 Cameras?
dustinc20 asks: "I dont know if this is the right area, but being as this is a geek site I'd ask my fellow geeks if anyone knows a way to build a battery pack for one of those X-10 cameras. It has a frequency encoder(?) in the power supply and this makes it more complicated than just supplying 12vDC."
At radioshack we had wireless cameras simular to X10's (In a way) that also had battery packs! We slammed them on some RC vechicals, threw them in the roof to lay some wire.
I'm a big retard who forgot to log out of Slashdot on Mike's computer! LOOK AT ME.
(registration required) Here's an article at the New York Times with a little more detail.
So, you're the one who makes X-10 think their pop up frenzy advertising will work.
;-)ing
Burn the heretic
only half
Get the EULA T-shirt
Advertise the hell out of them with annoying pop-up ads!
Whoops, that idea's already taken!
Seeing as how I did this very thing last night... just grab 8 AA batteries and a holder, then connect the holder to the camera/transmitter. Absolutely no funkiness, just plain 12 volts.
Of course, you can also replace the crappy camera with a decent one (try Supercircuits). You might want details on the wiring for hooking it up, too.
I tried using a 9-volt battery with my X10. No extra hardware, just stripped the wires and pressed them against the terminals.
Works fine. I use it all the time on little RC cars. Lots of fun.
Also tried a 1 pint 12 volt lead battery - ran for like 3 days with the one I used. RC car had a little trouble hefting the battery though.
Of course, I'm not going to accept any blame if you fry yours.
.
Let's not stir that bag of worms...
I have seen the X10 camera at my local Fry's, and the quality goes way beyond bad, far into the range of unacceptable.
Definitely no good for the sexual hijinx implied by the ads. It might be acceptable as a surveilance camera to show stuff happening in real time, but I wouldn't count on getting evidence out of the horrid, grainy images.
If it worked as well as the pictures in the ads imply, it would actually be a great toy (and I'd probably own a few). But it doesn't even come within screaming distance of decent quality.
Whether you want the camera for spying or good dirty fun, it's simply not - ahem - up to the challenge.
D
If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
Where did you get your information? Power supplies aren't designed with "frequency encoders" or anything like that. Either a power supply outputs DC or AC. Since solid state electronics require DC, it seems pretty obvious ALL you need to do is strap 12V worth of batteries on it.