On Jun 26, 4:43 pm, mrdarr...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
> On Jun 26, 1:16 pm, lili...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Jun 26, 4:10 pm, mrdarr...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
>
> > > On Jun 26, 12:20 pm, lili...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
>
> > > > Hello everybody,
>
> > > > I have a set of battery, but I only one hooked up to the circuit,
The
> > > > other one act as a backup. I want to implement an electronic unit
that
> > > > will change (swap) the batteries.Therefore the wiring will need to
be
> > > > changed. The circuit need to sup****t 5amp of continuous current.
Here
> > > > is what I want to implement.
> > > > from:
> > > > A to C
> > > > B to D
>
> > > > to:
> > > > A to D
> > > > B to C
>
> > > > Is it better to use a analogue or digital switching approach. I am
> > > > just worried that digital might take too much energy by keeping
those
> > > > transistor or mosfet open and close.
>
> > > > Li
>
> > > You mean something like this? (view in fixed-width font, for
example,
> > > with Notepad)
>
> > > +---+ +----+ +---+
> > > |(+)|--switch A--| |--switch C--|(+)|
> > > | | |Load| | |
> > > | | | | | |
> > > |(-)|--switch B--| |--switch D--| |
> > > +---- +----+ +---+
>
> > > Batt 1 Batt 2
>
> > Michael, This is basically what I want to do.
> > The battery will run a very small motor and a light.
>
> > Li
>
> Looks like a double-pole-double-throw switch will work
>
> see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switch
> look under DPDT
>
> seems simpler than a MOSFET solution.
>
> When exactly do you want to switch?
>
> Michael
This was one of the initial idea, Maybe have a servo motor to control
the switch. ( and a PIC chip to supervise the whole operation)
K


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