[OT] measuring DC wall wart

From: Chris <mythtech_at_mac.com>
Date: Fri Jun 7 11:32:59 2002

This is off topic, since the wall wart is only a few years old, but there
are some great electrical people here, so I am asking because I know
someone will know the answer.

I have a wall wart to a modem. I got the modem and wart in a box of used
stuff (ooh, some of which was more than 10 years old, so at least there
is a reference to on-topicness).

The modem failed to work from the day I got it. Today, someone that has
the same modem asked if I had a power supply they could have. I planned
to give them mine, since I have no real use for it.

But before I mailed it to them, a voice went off in my head telling me to
stick it on a meter first. It's label says it is a 9vDC, 400mA Pos-tip
wart. But when I hook it up to a meter, I get 15v DC off it.

That seems a little high, even for something under no load. Should I
safely assume the wart is no good, and point the person elsewhere (Rat
Shack sells a usuable unit for only about $14, so it isn't like the
person has no other choice). Or is it normal for a 9v supply to put out
15 volts? Any that I have measured in the past have not been THAT far off
(I was expecting to maybe get 10 or 12 volts, but not 15).

If this thing has been pumping too much voltage, that might explain the
dead modem I have (or the modem could have been used as a soccer ball,
who knows, it was dead when I got it). I just don't want to send the
person a bad supply, and have them fry their modem when they try to use
it.

-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
Received on Fri Jun 07 2002 - 11:32:59 BST

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