Hi,
Wondering if someone here more knowledgeable on this stuff than I am (and it wouldn't take much) can help me. I’ve tried to look on various forums/videos of people who have done similar but can’t find an exact answer.
I’m looking to use a wifi extender to enable me to fly my AR Drone 2.0 further than I can currently get with my iPhone wifi which is around 15-20m. As it’s for this use it only has to power the extender for around 30mins – 1hr (but I don't want to risk it dieing earlier than that and downing my drone).
I’ve seen people who have made their wifi extender portable using a Lipo battery cell but from what I can see these have a higher voltage than the wifi extender I have allows.
I currently have the following:
Wifi Extender: TP-Link TL-WA801ND, states Power: 9v, 0.85A.
Parrot AR Drone 2.0 Battery: 1500mAh Lithium Polymer Battery
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Parrot-AR-Drone-1500mAh-Lithium-Polymer/dp/B00DAL5GD2
This is probably a stupid question but what stops me buying a normal 9v battery, PP3 connector and terminating into a 2.5mm DC power connector and powering the extender with that? This looks like a cheap option but I presume the battery life would be poor, I’m not sure if it’s even possible or how long it would last?
I guess if this isn’t an option the next thing is to buy a 2.5mm DC power connector (http://www.maplin.co.uk/p/maplin-25mm-screw-terminal-dc-power-plug-n82kt), wire it to a mini-Tamiyaconnector (http://www.maplin.co.uk/p/race-pack...BG7IsgA7rhh8NRI9kf9Wm2YVU1jbP3aF92RoC1J3w_wcB) and connect it to a large lipo battery. However I’m not sure what type of battery of this type would be suitable for the wifi extender? The one’s I can find are a higher voltage than the extender states are required.
Ideally the answer wouldn't require too much electrical skill in manufacturing!
If anyone could help clarify what would work best and how to do it, it would be greatly appreciated, usually try and figure these things out myself but I’m stuck on this one and a little bit of electrical knowledge is a dangerous thing!
Thanks in advance for your help!
Jim lad
Wondering if someone here more knowledgeable on this stuff than I am (and it wouldn't take much) can help me. I’ve tried to look on various forums/videos of people who have done similar but can’t find an exact answer.
I’m looking to use a wifi extender to enable me to fly my AR Drone 2.0 further than I can currently get with my iPhone wifi which is around 15-20m. As it’s for this use it only has to power the extender for around 30mins – 1hr (but I don't want to risk it dieing earlier than that and downing my drone).
I’ve seen people who have made their wifi extender portable using a Lipo battery cell but from what I can see these have a higher voltage than the wifi extender I have allows.
I currently have the following:
Wifi Extender: TP-Link TL-WA801ND, states Power: 9v, 0.85A.
Parrot AR Drone 2.0 Battery: 1500mAh Lithium Polymer Battery
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Parrot-AR-Drone-1500mAh-Lithium-Polymer/dp/B00DAL5GD2
This is probably a stupid question but what stops me buying a normal 9v battery, PP3 connector and terminating into a 2.5mm DC power connector and powering the extender with that? This looks like a cheap option but I presume the battery life would be poor, I’m not sure if it’s even possible or how long it would last?
I guess if this isn’t an option the next thing is to buy a 2.5mm DC power connector (http://www.maplin.co.uk/p/maplin-25mm-screw-terminal-dc-power-plug-n82kt), wire it to a mini-Tamiyaconnector (http://www.maplin.co.uk/p/race-pack...BG7IsgA7rhh8NRI9kf9Wm2YVU1jbP3aF92RoC1J3w_wcB) and connect it to a large lipo battery. However I’m not sure what type of battery of this type would be suitable for the wifi extender? The one’s I can find are a higher voltage than the extender states are required.
Ideally the answer wouldn't require too much electrical skill in manufacturing!
If anyone could help clarify what would work best and how to do it, it would be greatly appreciated, usually try and figure these things out myself but I’m stuck on this one and a little bit of electrical knowledge is a dangerous thing!
Thanks in advance for your help!
Jim lad