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Energy Harvesting at the Dollar store.

M

mike

Jan 1, 1970
0
Was browsing the dollar store and picked up a solar powered daisy.
Plastic flower that waves around powered by light.

Has two small solar cells charging an electrolytic cap.
Disappears under a blob of epoxy. Out the other side comes
a coil that sits under the magnet on the daisy shaft.

Runs on surprisingly low light level. I don't have a high
impedance measurement device or the inclination to measure it,
but it appears that the cap charges until it reaches a threshold
and dumps into the coil. Lower light level increases the time
between dumps. The coil has a lot of turns, so stepping up the
voltage will take more turns than I'm willing to wind. I just stuck
it in the window. I always wanted a plant...

Most impressive thing is that it has about 8 molded plastic parts,
two solar cells, a circuit board with a chip, an electrolytic,
a coil of wire and a magnet. Comes in a bubble pack with a cardboard
insert.
It must pass through at least three levels of distribution channel
and get shipped from China then trucked to the vendor.
And they can sell it to me for a buck!!!

The donut I bought to fuel the bike ride home with it cost more than
the daisy.
 
N

Nico Coesel

Jan 1, 1970
0
mike said:
Was browsing the dollar store and picked up a solar powered daisy.
Plastic flower that waves around powered by light.

Has two small solar cells charging an electrolytic cap.
Disappears under a blob of epoxy. Out the other side comes
a coil that sits under the magnet on the daisy shaft.

Runs on surprisingly low light level. I don't have a high
impedance measurement device or the inclination to measure it,
but it appears that the cap charges until it reaches a threshold
and dumps into the coil. Lower light level increases the time
between dumps. The coil has a lot of turns, so stepping up the
voltage will take more turns than I'm willing to wind. I just stuck
it in the window. I always wanted a plant...

We have a few of those for a while now. The Chinese even know how to
waste solar energy :)
 
J

Jamie

Jan 1, 1970
0
mike said:
Was browsing the dollar store and picked up a solar powered daisy.
Plastic flower that waves around powered by light.

Has two small solar cells charging an electrolytic cap.
Disappears under a blob of epoxy. Out the other side comes
a coil that sits under the magnet on the daisy shaft.

Runs on surprisingly low light level. I don't have a high
impedance measurement device or the inclination to measure it,
but it appears that the cap charges until it reaches a threshold
and dumps into the coil. Lower light level increases the time
between dumps. The coil has a lot of turns, so stepping up the
voltage will take more turns than I'm willing to wind. I just stuck
it in the window. I always wanted a plant...

Most impressive thing is that it has about 8 molded plastic parts,
two solar cells, a circuit board with a chip, an electrolytic,
a coil of wire and a magnet. Comes in a bubble pack with a cardboard
insert.
It must pass through at least three levels of distribution channel
and get shipped from China then trucked to the vendor.
And they can sell it to me for a buck!!!

The donut I bought to fuel the bike ride home with it cost more than
the daisy.

We have a local junk store where I occasionally browse. One time
I stopped there and they had these goose neck LED Flash lights, which
has a laser pointer in it, magnet to hold it on something and spare
CR12xx cells in the package for 2 bucks each, I bought every one they
had on the rack!.

Jamie
 
C

Charlie E.

Jan 1, 1970
0
We have a local junk store where I occasionally browse. One time
I stopped there and they had these goose neck LED Flash lights, which
has a laser pointer in it, magnet to hold it on something and spare
CR12xx cells in the package for 2 bucks each, I bought every one they
had on the rack!.

Jamie

I have a couple of these I got free from a Microchip seminar. They
are GREAT! Extremely useful in working in the back of things, or
under the desk...

Charlie
 
J

Jamie

Jan 1, 1970
0
Charlie said:
I have a couple of these I got free from a Microchip seminar. They
are GREAT! Extremely useful in working in the back of things, or
under the desk...

Charlie
Well you know, I try very hard to "not" work under the desk, even
though my boss thinks I should at times :)

Jamie
 
F

Fred Abse

Jan 1, 1970
0
Was browsing the dollar store and picked up a solar powered daisy. Plastic
flower that waves around powered by light.

Just the sort of innovation that civilization has been waiting for ;-)
 
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