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Showing posts with label consumer products. Show all posts
Showing posts with label consumer products. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Don't Drop It.

I briefly stuck my head into a Source store to look at their radio selection.  As I did I walked past the remote control display.  This included a 300 buck model.  Who buys a 300 buck remote control I wondered.  Of course the answer is someone with a 10 grand home theatre system.  Given how often remotes get dropped, sat on, or otherwise abused I'd hate to have one that expensive to damage.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Battery Conundrum.

I just bought a radio that uses 3 AA batteries, which I have installed because using it on batteries is useful for some things. But batteries tend to come packed in multiples of two and four. So I now have a left over battery that will sit in my drawer for the foreseeable future, since most of the things that use AA batteries around here use at least two at a time. Perhaps I should go out and try to find a penlight that use one AA.

Monday, June 08, 2009

Adapter Nation.

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Having purchased a radio with an AC adapter last week I was prompted to think about those ubiquitous things. Frankly I don't know how many I have currently lying around. As the years have gone by we've seen more and more of them in use. But it's not just for using battery powered devices at home. A lot of equipment with no real provision for battery power uses them too. This is done because it simplifies the production process of various products. Instead of having to produce examples of your product with a different built in power supply for each market you have them all powered by an adapter and simply put the one appropriate for each market into the package just before shipping, or leave it up to the user to find an appropriate power supply. It is also easier to get some products approved by the various product standards organisations if you don't have to deal with a built in AC power supply.

It's too bad that AC adapters still largely follow the standard "wall wart" format, where the plug is mounted directly on the same box that contains the power transformer of the adapter. I have a couple of pieces of equipment whose adapters have an AC power cord attached to the transformer box instead of having the AC plug mounted directly. This make it easier to run multiple adaptors from the same AC power outlet because you don't have the transformer box blocking an outlet. This is especially handy if you're using a power strip. I would assume that the wall wart survives simply because it's cheaper to make than the newer design.