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GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
trønderen11-Feb-21 11:26
trønderen11-Feb-21 11:26 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
Eddy Vluggen11-Feb-21 11:58
professionalEddy Vluggen11-Feb-21 11:58 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
Jörgen Andersson11-Feb-21 21:48
professionalJörgen Andersson11-Feb-21 21:48 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
Richard MacCutchan11-Feb-21 21:28
mveRichard MacCutchan11-Feb-21 21:28 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
James Curran11-Feb-21 23:28
James Curran11-Feb-21 23:28 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
glennPattonWork312-Feb-21 0:00
professionalglennPattonWork312-Feb-21 0:00 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
James Curran12-Feb-21 5:37
James Curran12-Feb-21 5:37 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
trønderen12-Feb-21 7:23
trønderen12-Feb-21 7:23 
Having a 12VDC distribution network in your house has some distinct advantages.

First: I guess this depends on where you live, but around here, you can't do much more than replace a lightbulb without calling a professional electrician, and they are expensive. With 12VDC you can do all or most of the work yourself.

The risks of electrical shock, fires etc. are far smaller with 12VDC than with 230VAC.

Assuming that you draw the power from a (usually solar-powered) battery bank, you still have light during a power blackout.

For the myriads of small electrical equipment - active USB hubs, external PC disks requiring external power, small radios and similar electronics, LED strips, toys, chargers for anything from electric knives to flashlights ... - requiring low voltage power, you can get rid of these clunky charger bricks; you use a simple cable.

Yet, when I tell people that I am making a 12VDC in my home, practically everyone shakes their head and think I am crazy. A few of them know enough to ask questions in the style of "But haven't you been think of ...?" - the high current, high losses, required cable dimension, whatever. I give them my answers, which they usually accept as good enough, "But still, do you really think it is a good idea?" Yes, I do. "Well, I wouldn't..." So be prepared for some resistance from friends.

And try to reduce the resistance in the cables. Make a plan for where the cables should run - the shortest path possible.

One trick I will be using to shorten cables: They go straight to the drain (e.g. lamp), not making a detour to a wall switch and back again. Rather, in the connection point for that lamp, you put a two-coil, bi-stable relay. The two coils are connected on the one pole to the 12VDC, the other to a thin control lead that you can pull anywhere, to as many on-off-switches you want. Switches are "call button" type: A brief press on the "On" button activates the one coil, pulling the relay to the "On" state. A press on the "Off" button activates the other coil, pulling the relay "Off". (I actually use 3-position toggle switches returning to middle position, no connection. Pressing at the top, the "on" control line is shorted to ground, pressing at the bottom shorts the "off" line to ground.) The control lines need only carry enough power to draw the relay coil, which is usually not much, and only while you press the button.

Along that control line, you can put as many ways to short to ground as you like. E.g. when you open you main door, a contact strip may turn light on in you entrance. You can have switches for turning the light on/off both at the top and bottom of the stairs. You could have a switching transistor do the shorting, the transistor base controlled by a computer. (From a PC, you can use a USB-to-LPT adapter, switching one control line through each data pin, or you could have more direct signals from some SBC like an Arduino.)

I was much in doubt about what kind of sockets to use for plug-in devices, but settled on 3-pin XLR connectors (I mistakenly wrote "XLR connector" in an earlier post; it was supposed to be XLR!), prepared for 12VDC, ground and 5VDC - but I am not sure that I will stick to 5VDC. It will probably be 24VDC - my solar panel battery bank is 24V, and some equipment both in fans and light are available in bigger capacities as 24VDC models.

So go ahead with your low-volt DC network!
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
ElectronProgrammer12-Feb-21 7:53
ElectronProgrammer12-Feb-21 7:53 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
trønderen12-Feb-21 9:34
trønderen12-Feb-21 9:34 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
ElectronProgrammer13-Feb-21 7:59
ElectronProgrammer13-Feb-21 7:59 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
trønderen13-Feb-21 12:54
trønderen13-Feb-21 12:54 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
ElectronProgrammer15-Feb-21 2:41
ElectronProgrammer15-Feb-21 2:41 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
trønderen15-Feb-21 4:20
trønderen15-Feb-21 4:20 
GeneralRe: USB for Power? Pin
glennPattonWork312-Feb-21 8:08
professionalglennPattonWork312-Feb-21 8:08 
GeneralY'know Pin
Chris Maunder11-Feb-21 6:15
cofounderChris Maunder11-Feb-21 6:15 
GeneralRe: Y'know Pin
Mircea Neacsu11-Feb-21 6:22
Mircea Neacsu11-Feb-21 6:22 
GeneralRe: Y'know Pin
Slacker00711-Feb-21 6:30
professionalSlacker00711-Feb-21 6:30 
GeneralRe: Y'know Pin
Greg Utas11-Feb-21 6:51
professionalGreg Utas11-Feb-21 6:51 
GeneralRe: Y'know Pin
Daniel Pfeffer11-Feb-21 8:10
professionalDaniel Pfeffer11-Feb-21 8:10 
GeneralRe: Y'know Pin
trønderen11-Feb-21 9:14
trønderen11-Feb-21 9:14 
GeneralRe: Y'know Pin
Slacker00711-Feb-21 9:47
professionalSlacker00711-Feb-21 9:47 
GeneralRe: Y'know Pin
Daniel Pfeffer11-Feb-21 10:03
professionalDaniel Pfeffer11-Feb-21 10:03 
GeneralRe: Y'know Pin
trønderen11-Feb-21 12:15
trønderen11-Feb-21 12:15 
GeneralRe: Y'know Pin
Jörgen Andersson11-Feb-21 20:21
professionalJörgen Andersson11-Feb-21 20:21 

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