Sunday, April 15, 2012
Order the KZX1250 at www.adicorp.net The KZX1250 is a brand new PWM, not to be confused with any other PWM; The KZX1250 has an on board computer with advanced features that make it virtually bulletproof and safe to use, no other PWM can match it. Don't trust any PWM under your hood. With the KZX1250 you know you are safe and that your PWM is designed to handle tough situations that most other PWM's were never designed to. Start out with a computer that digitally generates the pulses. Send the output through Schmidt triggers to get a sharp squarewave which is then fed to a high speed MOSFET driver and finally to 8 PowerPak MOSFET's through their own individual driving resistors. The efficient design means it runs super cool. How cool is that? The KZX1250 does not have a heatsink because it just doesn't get very hot; just a small 40mm fan. With 50 amps going through it at max frequency, the KZX1250 enclosure doesn't even get warm and the protruding circuit board gets luke warm, you can squeeze it between your two fingers without getting burned! As you'll see in the video, the KZX1250 has short circuit protection. Automotive fuses can take up to 100 miliseconds after its rated current is reached before opening. That's a tenth of a second; which might seem fast to you, but to semiconductors, it is like a year! Fuses are activated by heat and the same heat that the fuse sees is the heat that the MOSFET's see as well. The KZX1250 opens the circuit in less than 1 millisecond so ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=giBHsle1I9k&hl=en
Labels: automotive, Intelligent, KZX1250
Saturday, February 4, 2012
Review of the Voltaggio Automotive Voltage Stabilizer by djgrooveline.flv
0 comments Posted by shopping-team at 8:15 AMYouTuber djgrooveline has done a review of the Adhoc Voltaggio Automotive Voltage Stabilizer. Thank you djgrooveline. This video is re-uploaded with his permission. To view this video in its original context please go to: www.youtube.com Djgrooveline's channel: www.youtube.com Go to www.adhoc-tech-sci.com for product details.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67FDIGXHNVk&hl=en
Labels: automotive, djgroovelineflv, Review, Stabilizer, Voltage, Voltaggio
Saturday, October 1, 2011
1st Unboxing: Ad Hoc Technologies - Automotive Voltage Stabilizer
0 comments Posted by shopping-team at 8:30 PMAndy is a YT entrepreneur who designs and invents products. He sent me one of his automotive voltage stabilizers to try and give feedback. Please check out his channel for information if you are interested in learning more. Review vids will be posted. Thank you andrewchan84 for your generousness. Andrewchan84 www.youtube.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7YahUKcp1Z0&hl=en
Labels: automotive, Stabilizer, Technologies, unboxing, Voltage
Sunday, November 14, 2010
BLDC motor from an automotive alternator / Harjatontasavirtamoottori autonlaturista
0 comments Posted by shopping-team at 9:00 PMWhere to get an inexpencive brushless DC motor? Your local junk yard! I bought this slightly used alternator from a local recking yard for 20 €, thats about 30 $. Rip out the bridge rectifier and voltage regulator, solder on some longer wires to the stator coils and to the brushess. Okay so it's not brushless yet, but it's super cheap and has tons of power! This 55 A charger has performed well as a motor and has a maximum constant power over 600 W! The peak power has been 1 KW! Thats the easy part, now just make a BLDC motorcontroller :P. Or buy one. I wan't cheap so i made one. Still not done as you can tell in the video... about 4 months it's been to get this far.. anyway enjoy the video. Oh ya the little white box with red numbers shows the motors RPM when i hold the Hall effect sensor connect to it near a neodymium magnet spinning with the axel.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tu-ia7GylO0&hl=en
Labels: Alternator, automotive, autonlaturista

