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Hack a Female USB Port to a Motorola Phone Charger

Hack a Female USB Port to a Motorola Phone Charger
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I needed a wall charger for my iPod, but I didnt want to fork over 30 bucks for the Apple wall charger. I had a extra Motorola USB charger, which would work nicely except it had a miniusb jack at the end. I looked for a mini usb to regular usb converter but came up empty. The only option left was to take the charger under the knife.

This Instructable will show you how to take a USB Motorola Phone Charger and stick a female usb charger for charging USB devices, which in this case is an iPod.

 
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Step 1Disassembly

Disassembly
The case is superglued together, so you need to forcefully open the case.

I first put the charger in vice (as pictured). I then cut the cord as close to the case as possible. After that I stuck a pair of needle nosed pliers in the hole that the cord comes out of. Then using good ol' brute strength, I pulled the pliers apart until the case broke open. The case broke very cleanly using this method.
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72 comments
1-40 of 72next »
Sep 2, 2010. 4:04 AMbowlofpudding says:
they don't make a usb mini to regular usb adaptor, however what I used to do was plug the mini end into the usb input of a usb hub. then you can charge 4 things at once. Great idea though, takes up less room when unplugged.
Jun 1, 2009. 5:13 PMjrodenbaugh says:
Just made one myself, thanks for the instructions. I used an old phone charger that was 5V 1000mA. As some have mentioned I had to connect the data pins to the 5V pin in order to get ipods to charge. I simply ran one 100k ohm resister from the two center pins to the 5V pin and that seems to be working so far. It's worked with a Nano 3rd gen and a shuffle 2nd gen. There wasn't quite enough room with the way the charger was set up inside to get the USB plug inset all the way so it kind of sticks out a bit and doesn't look quite as clean. Oh well, I made up for it with some strategic branding. An official Apple USB charger for way less than $30.
Jan 6, 2010. 10:17 AMmacmaniac says:
With the 4th and 5th gen nanos (touches and iphones I think as well) you don't have to tie the data pins to +5V but you do need to tie them together through a 10KOhm resistor. Amusingly I did almost exactly this (except I had the USB port on the end of the cable in a small enclosure) completely independently to this instructable.
Dec 31, 2009. 9:26 PMwwejason says:
You could just by a charger from eforcity.com for like $5 and save the trouble.
Aug 10, 2009. 9:48 PMsome114 says:
I tried. I failed miserably
Oct 9, 2008. 7:12 PMkimball100 says:
Where can I get a Female USB port
Apr 8, 2009. 10:34 PMdaiatlus79 says:
easy way is to buy a usb extension at a dollar store and then clip the end
Aug 9, 2009. 4:54 PMsk8er6 says:
best way
Jul 18, 2009. 8:11 PMCavanhaMan says:
Excelent! I put 2 leds in mine... Congrats!
Apr 3, 2009. 3:58 PMmitchell931993 says:
you're awesome- you never throw anything away
Jun 17, 2009. 12:53 PMabadfart says:
that is a good thing i have boxes of spare parts in my office
May 17, 2009. 5:49 PMFoaly7 says:
You can use the wall plugin for a DS for this, right?
Apr 4, 2009. 9:52 AMdaiatlus79 says:
lol i got one of these with my chipod off ebay last year. its identicle to the moto charger but it has a circle instead of the actual moto logo. and it has two leds, red and green, in front.
Apr 4, 2009. 5:56 AMmitchell931993 says:
mine looks a lil different- still its a motorola charger tho any ideas
Aug 8, 2008. 2:50 PMCalcProgrammer1 says:
Pretty sure the "charging circuit" is just jumping the Data + and - lines. From what I've read, those two pins need to be jumped to make some devices charge. I'd check it with a multimeter to make sure, as I don't think a true "circuit" (something capable of transmitting a specific signal) would fit in that tiny plug.
Aug 15, 2008. 8:59 AMLegendofPedro says:
The data lines are pulled to ground through a 15K resistor. These resistors should be added so your USB devices can draw 500ma. Without them, they won't draw more than 100ma, so will take longer to charge.
Aug 16, 2008. 7:40 AMLegendofPedro says:
Sorry, that's pulled to +5V.
Oct 8, 2008. 3:25 PMklee27x says:
Can you clarify what you posted here? Are you saying that pulling up the data lines tell the MOTHERBOARD of the computer to allow 500mA draw? Or are you saying that it tells some DEVICES to draw 500mA?
Oct 9, 2008. 12:03 AMLegendofPedro says:
There is no motherboard involved. Which is what this solves. A USB device (phone, iPod etc.) will not draw the maximum amount of current before the host (normally the motherboard) tells it that it can. The resistors just send this signal, so they allow the device to draw more current. So they cause it to charge faster.
Apr 3, 2009. 3:59 PMmitchell931993 says:
a resitor is only complised of an element inside a casing- no data flow involved
Apr 4, 2009. 2:57 AMLegendofPedro says:
Do you know how digital signals are sent? You either pull a data line momentarily high (to a +Vref) or low (to Gnd). The resistor limits the current provided to the data input on the IC.
Feb 27, 2009. 10:29 AMblowfish23 says:
Would it be possible to put in 2 or even 3 usb female ports and have them all work simultaneously?
Oct 7, 2008. 8:04 PMCartermarquis says:
There is no charging "circuit" within the mini USB plug. The only charging circuit it inside of the wallwart adapter which turns wall power into +5v DC, which is USB spec voltage. This allows you you charge USB items through the USB port in the charger. Please don't mess around with electronics that you don't completely understand. Wall voltage can kill.
Nov 13, 2007. 6:37 PMF-zero says:
Where would i go about getting a female usb jack and how do i know which "pins" are which
Oct 6, 2008. 1:50 AMshamanwhitewolf says:
Digi Key is probably my favorite place to get electronics parts, but you have to learn how to look through the web site (not hard). try this link to see some USB ports: http://search.digikey.com/scripts/DkSearch/dksus.dll?Cat=1442532;keywords=usb%20jack

To see the pin-outs for USB, see this wiki: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB#Types_of_USB_connector
Aug 8, 2008. 2:45 PMBigD145 says:
Just a little added info. I've seen USB extension cables (male on one end and female on the other) at Dollar stores like Dollar Tree.
Nov 18, 2007. 9:44 AMF-zero says:
how do i go about wiring positive and negative? Can I have a link to where I can buy one.
Sep 1, 2008. 7:54 AMrkr says:
I think your date might be off but I'll reply to this anyway. First, from what I know it's positive and ground since it's direct current. Also, to find which pin is which, you can Wiki 'usb'.

This might be a good place to find a usb extension cable: EMTC
They're relatively cheap, I bought a cell phone battery from there once.
Oct 5, 2008. 2:26 PMmaito says:
european version
Sep 1, 2008. 7:39 AMrkr says:
Hey I was wondering, since you people seem to know what you're talking about... Is it possible to charge an ipod with a power adapter that isn't exactly 5 volts? e.g. 4.1 volts? Also, I spliced my extra ipod cable open. The red wire is for +5V, and the black one is ground right? Apple didn't, like, switch colors around with the data wires or something... did they?
Sep 1, 2008. 7:56 AMrkr says:
Oh, and also, great instructable, I just don't want to use my phone charger for this.
Aug 8, 2008. 2:47 PMCalcProgrammer1 says:
Wow, this hack looks a lot like a cheap fake iPod charger that I got (got it really cheap). It came with a charger that is essentially what you built.
Jun 17, 2008. 10:44 AMmutantxgene says:
I have a newbie question based on what you did. Most of the diy solar projects I've seen you have to make sure that regulators, diodes etc. are used and that you cut off one end of a phone charger and solder everything together. Instead of cutting off the wires from a charger, couldn't I just hook the solar cells directly to the charger? I figured that the charger has all of the necessary electronics already. I would then make the USB connection you did in this Instructable. I'm new to soldering and electronics so forgive my lack of knowledge.
Jul 2, 2008. 1:08 PMzootboy says:
A small correction: An inverter changes DC to AC with some oscillation circuitry. To convert AC to DC, all you need is a diode, or if you want the full AC wave, a full-wave bridge rectifier (which is 4 diodes in a special arrangement). Also, the transformer goes before the diode because transformers do not work with DC. It goes from 120v AC -> [TRANSFORMER] -> 5v AC -> [DIODE] -> 5v DC.
Jan 5, 2008. 10:43 PMLancealator says:
I made one its really cool but for some reason my creative zen vision m doesnt reconize it and my kodak camera wont charge but it works on like my usb light awesome!!
Feb 11, 2008. 11:21 AMgrahamslawson says:
I could not charge my zen vision M over USB without connecting it to a computer. I think it needs some signal to send it into charge mode. Instead get a cable like this
Jan 20, 2008. 4:06 PMThe magical duct tape kid says:
This is so awesome!
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