I worked in the semiconductor industry and I remember frying a bunch of
chips when I reached a knee in the current draw. You can increase the
voltage until something breaks down, and then you're hosed. Lots of
current flows and your semiconducting device is no longer conducting at
all since you let all the magic smoke out.

I'd suggest the correct batteries, but I worked in a ham radio repair
shop years ago and I know how *(@#*&$ cheap hams are so I know telling
you to pay any extra to use the correct batteries will fall on deaf
ears. :)

----- Original Message ----- From: "Dan Barker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

I hook the 6V Camera up to a 6V power supply (actually a variable
voltage PS) through an ammeter. I slowly advance the voltage (toward
the 9.6V target of the high-capacity batteries stolen from my
Electric Zagi model airplane).

I figure if the current goes up, I'm going to cook something. If the
current decreases, then the power being dissipated is roughly
constant so I'm not cooking anything.

If I'm WAY off in left field, let me know. I'll spring for the $60 camera
batteries that don't last worth a poop instead of the [already on hand]
airplane batteries that hold up nicely.

--
Hisashi T Fujinaka - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
BSEE(6/86) + BSChem(3/95) + BAEnglish(8/95) + MSCS(8/03) + $2.50 = latte
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