Basically, I’m looking for a single bench source for lots of little(ish) 12V/5V things (external drives, RPI/other SBC, USB Hubs), as I"m sick of lots of 12V/5V adapters cluttering up my power bars.
My original thought was to just buy an extension, wire up the appropriate wires to a switch and put Anderson PP ends on the 12/5V sources I want to use for my various projects.
I was very curious to see this, but wasn’t sure why there was a 2A limit for each voltage, when my simple understanding of the power supply output information looks like there’s far more total amperage available than that, granted spread out over many wires. Each project I don’t expect to pull lots of power individually, so was hoping to power many from one source.
You could use a different fuse with careful design.
I’ve also made some little molex breakouts that take the 5V and 12V from the HDD connector and do the same thing (leds and polyfuse). I am still waiting on the pcb mount molex connectors to test them out. I have 10 so I can sell you some kits soon.
Ah, I’ve also done a wire version of this! I got a molex extension and cut the wires, wiring up 12V to powerpoles and 5V to a standard remote control “thing” servo connector. The only issue I had with doing this with a bench supply was turning on the power supply (hated using the jumper wire, always seemed just a little too ‘ghetto’).
So it’s basically what I’ve been doing, but with the added security of fuses and added prettiness of a board and not just wires.
(As an aside, I have found some power supply’s “5V” actually falls outside the given safe 5V range for a raspberry pi, had to try a few old PS’s I had laying around before I found one that tested ‘safe’).
I won’t make it down tonight or this week, but happy to send you the money
Tom, paypal, interac email money transfer, direct deposit into your bank
account, etc.
Sweeeet! I’ll try to drop in tonight and will bring cash moneys. Just for the less initiated among us (me), am I to look for a locker that says TomKeddie or something like that and just grab a baggy of ATX bits out of it? And Tom, if you’re not there is it okay for me to leave a small envelope of money in your locker? I’m not sure what the usual process is. Thanks!
Andrew, My locker is locked. I can leave a kit for you in the dropbox locker (labelled as such), you can give me the money via paypal or interac if you want.
Andrew, I’ll be there until 9:30. Lets leave it to chance, if I don’t see you tonight, I’ll leave you a kit and then you can pay me. It’s not a lot of money.
For all ATX Break Out Board peoples:
We will be setting up a build night in a couple of weeks for anyone that is interested. The ATX board is pretty simple but it does have some SMD parts. The plan would be to have a reflow oven and solder paste dispenser (use of thanks to @TomKeddie ) that all can use. Once the SMD parts are done you just have to hand solder the switch and power supply connector…
Awesome! I’ve looked at my parts a couple of times this week (insanely busy this week though so no chance to do anything with them)… but I’d love to join in on the group build night as I’ve never used a reflow oven. Sounds like it could make my life slightly easier!
Note that the top does not have cutouts for all the connectors, you need to mount it at the right height so the connector entries are below the acrylic but there is still enough above to turn them.