Granted fuses fear me when I come near, but if you know someone who is skilled with electrical knowledge then you have every reason to give your ideas a path to reality.
Well, Jim, K7JGM gave me a new idea for my Packet Go-Box. He mentioned that his Go-Box contained a Powerpole outlet to power his laptop computer. This means that it is possible to tap the 12 volt power supply for the radio to power a laptop. You just need a way to step up the 12V to something like 18 to 19 volts. The specific output voltage depends on which laptop you own. In my case the Toshiba laptop I have dedicated to my packet station needs 19 volts. I obtained this information from the power brick included with the laptop. The power brick tag says output is 19 volts and 3.95 amps. Being the trusting person that I am, I measured the voltage coming out of the brick and it read 19.6 volts. Close enough.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhoymVh4_LPJZmKk6RlRZnBziVrdS4qEgX2qTZDwo7NeJXFhMdLr8zOl249Luvqs0rbcBeeyGAaFrGwAlS165LLTDm2rmB-dNfuMDKkt_6SbXMdgDHfwIXNTPtgHwUxsUbrsXu3L1aIsGZR/s1600/IMAG0284.jpg)
For your Go-Box, you simply tap the 12 volts and install a Powerpole outlet somewhere accessible for you laptop. In my case, I already had a Go-Box built with 12 volt Powerpole outlet so, I decided to make an external 19V converter. Below you should see the convertor installed in a plastic "case" with Powerpole connectors on both input and output.
Finally 5 small holes were drilled to allow access to the screws which secure the wires AND the voltage adjust screw.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgREWTrP9DAZpyO1AD4jqPcn7ALDmXaMfVHcv35B4kinTc0gBW6ElrMEYx7MpjH1QqCFeQ8kLxJrF3xWMo-Mu4heEI1MoGdaAWv7Gq7DhE67bHc1XfMVJ5fCLkkL_2RXCoi6K6QkRNn1V9u/s1600/IMAG0286.jpg)
UPDATE (2014-05-10) :
So, you have a Dell laptop and it has a "smart" power brick. Well guess what! Instead of having the typical 2 connector power port, it has a 3 connector setup. That center pin is a way for your laptop to tell if the power brick is the correct one. Unfortunately, if it thinks the charger isn't the correct one, then it allows it to power the laptop but not charge the battery, even if it has the correct voltage. Some folks in the various forums have suggested to just send the 19 volts down the center connector as well, but don't do it. That connector expects no more than 4 volts so more then that may kill the "smart" chip. See http://kakopa.com/Dell_PS/index.html for some background.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjRqNC6xlkd0eqo4GIVGUE4OuLjJ5UM20R2J9J4A2lBueUt_SGU1x3rBVaK2MC5cteswNDxZyaPPi-D3kwcIi0TZ9w92byJtahkbTYRer8ShCJ0Cw8TrZowERAGXpl1HW4UNh7Tp775aIn6/s1600/IMAG0289.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgf29Vt6YkJr_zP0f4jehExKOw9wm5Q_yjeP0B5Kl91doUGWazMrHu32lkzs8IMtSYaboLfFx_P3nD8XiGjUACvAn-TicJ8dMb1TZFO-JnK_N324VAQ2A-lEYdVbIu12pxHfoTHY-TblRAP/s1600/IMAG0290.jpg)
An extremely simple solution is to remove the battery after the converter is plugged in. The only change with the battery removed is that the converter's fins warm up just a bit more than with the battery inserted.
If someone knows a way to fool the laptop into believing it has the correct power brick, please let me know.