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Solar DS "Light" Redone and Improved

Solar DS \"Light\" Redone and Improved
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The Nintendo DS Lite seems like it was made to have solar cells put on it. It has a large amount of surface area on the top and bottom that both face upward when the DS is opened. The top and bottom faces each have exactly the right amount of room for two 60x60mm solar cells side by side (four total). Each one has a maximum power output of 3 volts at 40 ma. The top two are connected in series and so are the bottom two. These two sets are wired in parallel to get a total of 6 volts at 80 ma, perfect for trickle-charging the battery.

My original instructable had a couple of flaws, some of them very important. I was originally going to post the updates on my first instructable, but there were so many changes that I had to make a whole new one.

Among these changes are:

  • Overcharge protection (the main reason I wrote a new Instructable)
  • Only one wire connecting the top to the bottom, not two little annoying ones
  • No wires around the edges
  • No annoying diodes where your hand goes
  • You can get the stylus out now (I accidentally put a solar cell over it the first time, silly me)

Another thing I need to mention is why I didn't use a 5v regulator and hook it up to the charging jack of the DS. The reason I did not do that is because I would have to rewire the solar cells to produce a higher voltage for the voltage regulator. This would give me less than 40 ma. Running that through a voltage regulator reduces that even further. Also, the DS would have its charging LED on if I did this. That would suck about half of the remaining current, leaving next to nothing for the battery. If I did it that way, the battery would charge about 4 times slower.

This is my third Instructable, and if you have any questions, don't hesitate to post a comment! Don't forget to rate and vote either!
 
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Step 1Materials

Materials
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The materials required for this instructable are:

Tools:

  • Hot glue gun with glue
  • Soldering iron with solder
  • Wire cutter/stripper
  • Multimeter
  • Helping hands tool (not required, but helpful)
  • Solder Sucker (helpful if you mess up)
  • Sandpaper
  • Small phillips screwdriver
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363 comments
1-40 of 363next »
Feb 28, 2012. 10:26 AMeddhewett says:
Hey :D

I know this instructable's a bit old but hopefully your still around to answer yet more questions :P

Thinking of implementing small solar cells into multiple gadgets and came across this:

http://www.dealextreme.com/p/si-solar-cell-panel-4-5v-5ma-12984

WOW 4.5V out of something so small ! but wait, theres a catch, the current is only 5mA :(

So my question to dark sponge is:

How important is the current in the process of charging small gadgets ? Would the lack of current be a worthy sacrifice for the extra voltage ?

If that ones a no goer than I do have a second solar cell in mind with higher current so no worries.

Cheers dude !

Edd Hewett
Feb 28, 2012. 10:38 AMeddhewett says:
Ok I think ive got more to add actually :P

As I understand it (which is not very well) the Voltage is the amount of electricity and the current is the flow of electricity, so the 4.5V cell with 5mA current could charge a gadget (say a mobile with a 3.7V battery) on its own but really slowly. Whereas with a 2V 25mA cell you would need 2 cells to generate enough V to charge the phone but it would charge a lot quicker as it has a lot more current.

So. . .

Would it charge 5 times quicker as it has 5 times the current ?

I am assuming current does not stack like V so if you were to include both the different cells in series the result would still only be a current of 5mA and not 30mA. Is this true ?

Cheers

Edd Hewett
Mar 12, 2012. 11:24 PMNorikaeru says:
One way to think of it is like water in a tube, Voltage is like pressure, helps to push the "water" (electrons) through the parts and pressure is lost to them like in frictional resistance, thus the main purpose of resisters is to lower voltage, and current is the flow. You can add voltage(but not current) by making them in series or add current(but not voltage) by adding the power source in parallel. Each part generally needs so much pressure and flow to work but not too much or your figurative pipes will break or overheat from friction, such as a fuse will blow if the current is too high. So basically they need to be within a threshold to get it to work and below the point where it will fry your parts so just adding more current doesn't mean it will charge faster, it might break it. though from the looks of it the higher current set looks to be the better option and though I don't know for sure should be a safe current. hope that helps.
Feb 11, 2012. 2:02 PMilithis says:
Hey guys, I was wondering if there would be any negative effects if I used a solar panel that outputs 5.5V instead of 6V (afaik that shouldn't be a problem), but the current output for this solar panel is 180mA. My DS Lite has a 1000mAh battery and I was wondering if that is too much juice when charging the battery or will the battery just charge faster?
Nov 24, 2011. 7:02 AMzombeastly says:
lets do it for 3ds next!!!
Jul 22, 2011. 1:10 AMSteppenw01f says:
Hi, I got stuck at the final testing part, when I touch the multimeter's positive terminal to B- and its negative terminal to the negative battery wire, the voltage spikes to around 2 volts then drops back to 0. When I solder the negative wire to B-, the DS doesn't turn on either. If I touch the negative terminal to the positive battery wire and back to the negative battery wire, it repeats the same behavior. I've checked my wiring repeatedly, everything seems fine as far as I can tell. FYI I'm using the PV cells, overcharge circuit, and diodes you listed on my original DS.

Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
Jul 25, 2011. 11:40 PMSteppenw01f says:
I just set it up on my SP also, can't wait for a sunny day!
Jul 25, 2011. 4:47 PMSteppenw01f says:
Messed around with it some more and it turns out the DS wouldn't turn on even with the battery directly plugged in : (, but I wired the battery back to the circuit and the circuit to another DS and it turns on fine! I'd test it right now, but it's rainy here and the forecast says it won't be mostly clear until at least Wednesday. I'll be sure to post a pic when the sun comes out.

Thanks for the advice and awesome guide!
Jul 24, 2011. 6:26 PMDaniel Deacon says:
could this be done on a netbook?
Jul 6, 2011. 7:24 AMcherylcaleb says:
i'm really interested in solar panels n their uses n i'm 12. My allowance obviously aint high enough. Wats the cost of this project n is there some cheaper method??????
Jun 27, 2011. 6:18 PMmreginello says:
Is it possible to put the entire rig onto a DS case? That way you can use it when needed?
Apr 17, 2011. 12:16 AMZeroXL91 says:
Wait, so like that guy said, is it possible to have a battery that can charge with solar and DC power?
Mar 30, 2011. 9:26 PMwinter-chaos says:
I need to reduce the voltage down to 4.5 or 4.6 volts for the DSi, any suggestions how I can do that....
Apr 13, 2011. 10:43 PMwinter-chaos says:
thanks that helps alot, ^^.
Mar 4, 2011. 9:02 PMtechnoguy94 says:
Is it possible to make a DSi version?
Dec 22, 2010. 9:21 PMShadowAssassin says:
I was wondering the same thing... if you just hooked it up to the end of a ds charger you'd be able to use solar power and normal wall charging... just a thought for ANOTHER redo :P
Nov 28, 2010. 3:39 PMbigfunkychiken says:
Hey! I saw all of the comments about soldering, and was wondering if you know of a reliable, cheap soldering iron? Thanks :)
Nov 30, 2010. 2:51 PMbigfunkychiken says:
Thanks a lot! I will look into it!
Oct 24, 2010. 4:45 AMthepaul1993 says:
If i had a DS i would make this.
Apr 12, 2009. 6:56 AMstargazer418 says:
Nice kitty
Jul 22, 2010. 4:48 PMMacworldwizardz says:
Yah, His cat is awesome!!!!!
Oct 18, 2010. 11:49 PMwat. says:
That cat likes the DS lite.
Apr 16, 2009. 8:41 AMfernxtwo says:
Hey Sponge , im 24 , & i think im going to do this.this week.for somone who doesnt know much about wiring and who's soldering skills are minimal . do you think i can do it? cheers.
Jul 8, 2010. 8:27 PMBrettfett1 says:
hey man, nice tutorial. i'm 14 and i have solar panels all over the back of my laptop, and my desk faces the window so instead of my normal 30 min battery life while gaming, i get 2 hours and 30 mins, and it charges pretty fast. i did it myself!
Apr 24, 2009. 8:35 PMJZ Price says:
age is only a number, i know a kid that when in 3rd grade got a boebot for Christmas i know the man with the largest number of Microsoft certifications in the world, and he started programing after college, he don't even have a degree, and is the best programmer/database expert i have ever seen
Apr 25, 2009. 7:29 PMReCreate says:
I can't quite put my finger on what this has anything to do...Who likes following instructions...?
1-40 of 363next »

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Author:dark sponge
Hi! I've loved electronics and electricity for as long as I can remember, and electric projects are something I do in my free time for fun. Everything I've learned about electricity is either from exp...
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