Want to charge a battery off your white wire, or just want to efficiently run some LED's directly? This circuit will take the alternating current from "the white wire", and turn it into the sweet, delicious direct current that batteries and LEDs love so much. All the parts are available from radioshack, and cost less than $8, provided you already have a soldering iron and other such tools.
First off, this is only a rectifier, not a regulator. What this means, is that the DC current is not guaranteed to be a specific voltage, and will vary a bit depending on the rpms of the engine. However, I have not needed to provide a regulator in my circuits as it seems to stay withing a fairly stable 5-9v. I've seen a few wild claims of 20+ volt spikes on other people's posts, but that may have been measured without any sort of load or stabilizing capacitors. When you measure voltage, always make sure you have a load. This is why I included resistors built into the circuit. It provides a guaranteed load, and helps keep the voltage spikes a little bit lower.
Lastly, the way I use my rectifier is without a battery, wired directly into a 4.5v LED flashlight, and a 3v LED bicycle tail light. Neither of them have any problem running at these voltages, and the total power used is only 1/4 watt. However, don't blame me if you end up burning out an LED =P. A good 6v battery will have no problems with these voltages.
These are all the parts you will need:
2- 1Watt resistors 10 ohm
2- 1000uf capacitors (16 volts MINIMAL). I used 35v.
1- 50v Full-Wave bridge rectifier
First off, this is only a rectifier, not a regulator. What this means, is that the DC current is not guaranteed to be a specific voltage, and will vary a bit depending on the rpms of the engine. However, I have not needed to provide a regulator in my circuits as it seems to stay withing a fairly stable 5-9v. I've seen a few wild claims of 20+ volt spikes on other people's posts, but that may have been measured without any sort of load or stabilizing capacitors. When you measure voltage, always make sure you have a load. This is why I included resistors built into the circuit. It provides a guaranteed load, and helps keep the voltage spikes a little bit lower.
Lastly, the way I use my rectifier is without a battery, wired directly into a 4.5v LED flashlight, and a 3v LED bicycle tail light. Neither of them have any problem running at these voltages, and the total power used is only 1/4 watt. However, don't blame me if you end up burning out an LED =P. A good 6v battery will have no problems with these voltages.
These are all the parts you will need:
2- 1Watt resistors 10 ohm
2- 1000uf capacitors (16 volts MINIMAL). I used 35v.
1- 50v Full-Wave bridge rectifier
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