I want to get a charger that I can plug into a regular electrical outlet, but don’t want to fry the clip (heh), so I was wondering what the appropriate voltage/wattage/amps/etc. for the clip are?
Better yet, would this charger at the link here be okay to use?
You asked, but this may not be what you really want to know
The clip, plugged into my PC, is reporting MaxPower of 500 mA. This is the USB high power mode (in fact, 500 mA is the max cuurent a USB device is ever allowed to draw), so the voltage spec is 4.75V < Vbus < 5.25V.
To get into high power mode required a software negotiation with the Clip. According to the spec, it must connect to the bus in low power mode (using less than 100 mA). A “dumb” charger would fall into this category and it’s Vbus specs would be 4.40V < Vbus < 5.25V.
The above is true for both USB 1.1 and USB 2.0.
I would guess that a charger has enough “smarts” to enable the high power mode. It wouldn’t take much.
When I plug the clip into my hub (with the hub disconnected from the computer) it charges, according to the battery icon, and it plays. I have no way to know what mode it is in. (/me wonders if the hub is smart enough to do the power negotiation - anyone know?)
I guess I should cut a cable and hook it straight to a power supply and see what it does. The clip can’t draw more than 100 mA, per spec, but the interesting questions are: does it charge? does it play? how much power does it draw? Is it worth sacrificing a cable? (My son emphatically says “yes” to the latter. - Maybe I’ll get back on this one)
And yes, I am an engineer. I have the USB specs and I have read them (several times). The clip conforms to those specs.
Ok, I did my little experiment with a power supply. Not that this helps M-3PO, but some of you might find this interesting.
It’s probably best to add a bit of a dislaimer here. I advise everyone NOT to do this. If you hook it up wrong, you will very likely blow your clip out. If you set the voltage wrong, you will likely blow your clip out. You might even gets some nasty smoke. I’ve been designing hardware and software professionally for over 30 years and (I think) I know what I am doing. So don’t even think about blaming me if you do something bad to your clip.
I cut a USB-A to USB-mini-B, tossed the USB-A end into a junk box and trimmed back the ends on the red and black leads on the mini-B half. I hooked the Vbus and ground to a high quality bench power supply set to 5.0V (not a cheapy wall wart). D- and D+ were left unconnected.
I plugged it into my clip (which was off) and it came on, drawing around 140mA. The battery charge animated icon indicated it was charging and I could play music, listen to the radio, etc., as it continued to charge.
The current varied from 120-140mA as I played with it. (It is out of the 100mA spec!)
When I turned the clip off, the current dropped to 0, therefore it is not charging when off.
So, a 5V/150mA charger should do the trick. 200mA to be on the safe side.
I think I’ll hook it up to a 4xAA, 2.6Ah NiMH battery pack (4.8V) and see what happens. That should run it good long while. (Note here that if you try this with 4 Alkaline batteries, it’ll probably blow your clip out because 4 of them would be 6V, Alkalines are 1.5V, NiMH and NiCd are 1.2V)
This one looks pretty good – but it doen’s list the V for the wall charger. And it says 12v for the car charger! Is this all definitely for the Clip? (I know the case is… )
IMHO, it’d be extremely helpful if we have a (sticky) thread that lists of external AC adaptors that have been confirmed to work with
the Sansa Clip
Perhaps, a list of ones to avoid as well
LMAO this is one reason I returned my C250 in favor of the Clip - I can charge it with a standard cable and any one of several cell phone chargers I have that use the mini USB connector - I already had 12V vehicular AND mains powered recharging capability for my goofy smart phone.
If you have a Windows Mobile phone or similar device with the USB mini plug and have a charger for it, you’re already golden.
Oh, BTW - you can LISTEN to it while it’s charging “standalone”, unlike when connected to a PC!
The current rating, in milliamperes, is the maximum capability of the charger. When it charges in fast mode (initial charge rate), this is a good thing. The Clip likes a USB 2.0 port to charge; the USB standard for a “2.0” port is 500mA too.
Hmm… I used Charger A) (see previous post) and although it seems to charge the device, I have been having problems with my clipzip after using this charger.
My clipzip is now unable to read micro sd cards and freezes on the “refreshing your media” screen.