S
sam
Guest
Hi folks,
I'm just after some advice/thoughts. A friend and I have been thinking
and talking about renewable energy and such. We're thinking that we
could use an exercise bike to charge some sort of battery, and then use
that battery to charge our mobile phones.
Firstly, is it feasible to charge the phone directly from the bike
(using an alternator and glue circuitry of course)? I'm not sure if
these calculations are right, so please critique as necessary
Let's
say that the phone charger provides 3.7V at .337A and takes three hours
to charge. So that should mean that a full charge of the phone is
about 0.003 kWh. Assuming we can generate 0.0001 kWh per minute (we
got that figure from http://www.scienceshareware.com/bike_gen_alt.htm)
that would mean that about 30 minutes of pedalling should charge the
phone. Is all that possible?
OR (and this is what we're thinking instead since it is more useful
anyway): what about if we charged a battery and then used that battery
to charge the phone? How would we go about doing that? What sort of
battery would we use to charge a phone? I assume any (rechargeable)
battery would do, as long as we could bring down the voltage and
provide the correct current. Do phone chargers (nokia 3310, or the
3xxx series, specifically) have any fancy electronics in them?
If this is all crazy stupid let me know
It's just some
experimentation we'd like to do; nothing serious and we certainly don't
want to power our homes from an exercise bike
cheers
sam
I'm just after some advice/thoughts. A friend and I have been thinking
and talking about renewable energy and such. We're thinking that we
could use an exercise bike to charge some sort of battery, and then use
that battery to charge our mobile phones.
Firstly, is it feasible to charge the phone directly from the bike
(using an alternator and glue circuitry of course)? I'm not sure if
these calculations are right, so please critique as necessary
say that the phone charger provides 3.7V at .337A and takes three hours
to charge. So that should mean that a full charge of the phone is
about 0.003 kWh. Assuming we can generate 0.0001 kWh per minute (we
got that figure from http://www.scienceshareware.com/bike_gen_alt.htm)
that would mean that about 30 minutes of pedalling should charge the
phone. Is all that possible?
OR (and this is what we're thinking instead since it is more useful
anyway): what about if we charged a battery and then used that battery
to charge the phone? How would we go about doing that? What sort of
battery would we use to charge a phone? I assume any (rechargeable)
battery would do, as long as we could bring down the voltage and
provide the correct current. Do phone chargers (nokia 3310, or the
3xxx series, specifically) have any fancy electronics in them?
If this is all crazy stupid let me know
experimentation we'd like to do; nothing serious and we certainly don't
want to power our homes from an exercise bike
cheers
sam