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-   -   Computer for boat (https://www.boatbanter.com/electronics/25974-computer-boat.html)

Pete Anderson December 10th 04 12:52 AM

Check out islandtimepc.com . They have a very low power 1 Ghz Windows XP
computer, and have a solution for the problems associated with 12 volt boat
power systems. I also like the fact that I can buy replacement parts for
everything they offer and can fix it myself.

Pete Anderson

Rolf wrote:

Sorry this topic has been discussed in many forms before.
I need a computer for the boat which I am going to buy ( 45 to 50 ft
cruising sailboat). I initially considered a desktop but was scared off
by the power consumption.
Now I am considering a Laptop. I want to use it to run navigation and
other boat soft ware, but I also want to use it for e-mails and for web
surfing when I have access and also to watch DVD's and CD's, so I feel
I need a Pentium 4 with Windows XP.

There is a bewildering choice of brands. One way to narrow the choice
is again power consumption from the house batteries since the computer
will be on a lot.
I can get an inverter and then plug in the power supply to that. But
that route looses about 20% of the power.
The better option is to have a DC to DC converter like one that is used
to connect a Laptop to the cigarette lighter in a car. But how much
power does that consume?
Third choice, is there a brand of Laptop eg Toshiba or others which
accepts power stratight from the House battery, ie a voltage anywhere
between 10 and 15 volts?



Johnhh December 10th 04 04:39 AM

It's a real nice machine for a boat if you want to conserve energy. I
bought the parts separately though and saved over 30% off their price and
got twice the harddrive and ram.

John

"Pete Anderson" wrote in message
...
Check out islandtimepc.com . They have a very low power 1 Ghz Windows XP
computer, and have a solution for the problems associated with 12 volt
boat
power systems. I also like the fact that I can buy replacement parts for
everything they offer and can fix it myself.

Pete Anderson

Rolf wrote:

Sorry this topic has been discussed in many forms before.
I need a computer for the boat which I am going to buy ( 45 to 50 ft
cruising sailboat). I initially considered a desktop but was scared off
by the power consumption.
Now I am considering a Laptop. I want to use it to run navigation and
other boat soft ware, but I also want to use it for e-mails and for web
surfing when I have access and also to watch DVD's and CD's, so I feel
I need a Pentium 4 with Windows XP.

There is a bewildering choice of brands. One way to narrow the choice
is again power consumption from the house batteries since the computer
will be on a lot.
I can get an inverter and then plug in the power supply to that. But
that route looses about 20% of the power.
The better option is to have a DC to DC converter like one that is used
to connect a Laptop to the cigarette lighter in a car. But how much
power does that consume?
Third choice, is there a brand of Laptop eg Toshiba or others which
accepts power stratight from the House battery, ie a voltage anywhere
between 10 and 15 volts?





Falky foo December 10th 04 07:55 AM

I have a 1.75 year old HP that has an AMD Athlon which drops to low power
(from 1.6 GHz to ~900 MHz) when the processing demand is low, which in my
case is about 90% of the time. Saves battery.



"Rolf" wrote in message
oups.com...
Sorry this topic has been discussed in many forms before.
I need a computer for the boat which I am going to buy ( 45 to 50 ft
cruising sailboat). I initially considered a desktop but was scared off
by the power consumption.
Now I am considering a Laptop. I want to use it to run navigation and
other boat soft ware, but I also want to use it for e-mails and for web
surfing when I have access and also to watch DVD's and CD's, so I feel
I need a Pentium 4 with Windows XP.

There is a bewildering choice of brands. One way to narrow the choice
is again power consumption from the house batteries since the computer
will be on a lot.
I can get an inverter and then plug in the power supply to that. But
that route looses about 20% of the power.
The better option is to have a DC to DC converter like one that is used
to connect a Laptop to the cigarette lighter in a car. But how much
power does that consume?
Third choice, is there a brand of Laptop eg Toshiba or others which
accepts power stratight from the House battery, ie a voltage anywhere
between 10 and 15 volts?




Dennis Pogson December 11th 04 09:36 AM

Rolf wrote:
Sorry this topic has been discussed in many forms before.
I need a computer for the boat which I am going to buy ( 45 to 50 ft
cruising sailboat). I initially considered a desktop but was scared
off by the power consumption.
Now I am considering a Laptop. I want to use it to run navigation and
other boat soft ware, but I also want to use it for e-mails and for
web surfing when I have access and also to watch DVD's and CD's, so I
feel I need a Pentium 4 with Windows XP.

There is a bewildering choice of brands. One way to narrow the choice
is again power consumption from the house batteries since the computer
will be on a lot.
I can get an inverter and then plug in the power supply to that. But
that route looses about 20% of the power.
The better option is to have a DC to DC converter like one that is
used to connect a Laptop to the cigarette lighter in a car. But how
much power does that consume?
Third choice, is there a brand of Laptop eg Toshiba or others which
accepts power stratight from the House battery, ie a voltage anywhere
between 10 and 15 volts?


With a 45-50ft sailboat, it's easier and cheaper to boost battery capacity
than to decrease power usage on laptops and ancillary equipment. You have
the space, and the wiring is dead easy!
Remove "nospam" from return address.


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