12-04-2018, 06:55 AM
(This post was last modified: 12-04-2018, 06:57 AM by OMyMyOHellYes.)
RE: Resmed Autosense - No Electricity Scare
Batteries:
Big & heavy = cheap, reliable, stable, time proven technology
Small & light = more expensive, and well.... more delicate and when they go bad, it is often with bad results (anybody fly with a Samsung Galaxy 7 lately?)
US reference prices -
35-39 AH 12 V SLA battery (good for several nights in my configuration (YMMV), three and a half nights with low-moderate heated humidification - so if it dies in the night, I'm still covered, still small and lightweight enough to move around (~10 KG) ~ $65
Resmed 12-24 converter (required on Resmed units even if you had a 24 V battery) ~ $100
Fuse protected 12 V female cigar lighter cable w/ alligator clips ~ $10 - no fancy wiring required.
For manual switchover in power failure(wake up or before bed unplug standard wall unit and hook up battery to 12-24 converter, plug that e=into battery and back of Resmed unit) -
Deltran Battery Tender smart charger ~ $35 for small wall wart charger (looooooong time to recharge depleted battery; higher amperage models (twice the amperage) for ~$50.
For auto switchover is more elegant but more expensive - but you never know when power goes out -sleep right through it and it maintains battery all the time so minimal maintenance -
West mountain Super PwrGate PG40S ~ $135
12 V DC power supply (actually 14 V, but generally referred to as 12 V) ~ around $100
Both widely available from ham radio suppliers online. And wires...
This configuration has been posted several times on this forum - if interested search the forum results with keyword "powergate"
Also, go to the google and type in "Resmed Battery Guide". Resmed already wrote a book for you.
There. I said it.
OMMOHY
Contrarian in Residence
12-04-2018, 07:03 AM
(This post was last modified: 12-04-2018, 07:05 AM by OMyMyOHellYes.)
RE: Resmed Autosense - No Electricity Scare
(12-03-2018, 11:00 PM)Zainabpb Wrote: I'm learning alot from you, thank you. It's all still very complicated and at this point I just hope the electricity never goes of. With technology at the forefront it is quite strange that any of these companies making these machines have never thought of building these batteries inside the unit itself. Surely it should be a standard feature. How many products you get these days( Cellphones and Laptops for one) that doesn't need to be plugged in to operate. I think you should design a CPAP with built-in standby battery pack FATS.
Thanks for the help. ?
Google "Airing" It will have internal batteries; entirely self contained, The size of a Tootsie Roll. (snicker snicker snicker)
Simple answer - too big, too heavy. Even with LION cells. Too expensive. Rapidly depleted capacity (think how long that cell phone or laptop you got 2-3 years ago would go on a full charge when new vs now).
There. I said it.
OMMOHY
Contrarian in Residence
12-04-2018, 08:38 AM
(This post was last modified: 12-04-2018, 08:45 AM by Fats Drywaller.)
RE: Resmed Autosense - No Electricity Scare
(12-03-2018, 11:00 PM)Zainabpb Wrote: I think you should design a CPAP with built-in standby battery pack FATS.
Thanks, but that would be OMMOHY who should do that. However, as he said, it's not really feasible with the technology we have at the moment, so the CPAP machine and its DC power source are two separate domains.
The information is in the various discussion threads here about power failures (and "power" is another good search term because not all of them have "UPS" or "battery" in the title), but for non-techies it's definitely too much trouble to put together a workable setup. The packaged products (BPS, Medistrom) are far preferable, when they work properly ... but they're expensive.
I was inadvertently a little bit misleading in an earlier reply, because some of the off-the-shelf lithium-ion battery packs, including that Gissaral that I reviewed, are not suitable for use in a UPS configuration because they won't automatically switch on and select the correct voltage. So finding just the right product is a challenge. For use while camping it's not a problem, but for building a UPS it is.
So far, my inexpensive non-solution at home is to be resigned to waking up in the middle of the night and connecting the battery pack if necessary, rather than having automatic failover.
RE: Resmed Autosense - No Electricity Scare
(12-04-2018, 06:55 AM)OMyMyOHellYes Wrote: Also, go to the google and type in "Resmed Battery Guide". Resmed already wrote a book for you.
Yes. For anyone who wants it, the latest edition, August 2018, is
here (PDF file) on the Resmed web site.
Thanks for the good summary of some options.
RE: Resmed Autosense - No Electricity Scare
(12-04-2018, 06:55 AM)OMyMyOHellYes Wrote: Batteries:
Big & heavy = cheap, reliable, stable, time proven technology
Small & light = more expensive, and well.... more delicate and when they go bad, it is often with bad results (anybody fly with a Samsung Galaxy 7 lately?)
US reference prices -
35-39 AH 12 V SLA battery (good for several nights in my configuration (YMMV), three and a half nights with low-moderate heated humidification - so if it dies in the night, I'm still covered, still small and lightweight enough to move around (~10 KG) ~ $65
Resmed 12-24 converter (required on Resmed units even if you had a 24 V battery) ~ $100
Fuse protected 12 V female cigar lighter cable w/ alligator clips ~ $10 - no fancy wiring required.
For manual switchover in power failure(wake up or before bed unplug standard wall unit and hook up battery to 12-24 converter, plug that e=into battery and back of Resmed unit) -
Deltran Battery Tender smart charger ~ $35 for small wall wart charger (looooooong time to recharge depleted battery; higher amperage models (twice the amperage) for ~$50.
For auto switchover is more elegant but more expensive - but you never know when power goes out -sleep right through it and it maintains battery all the time so minimal maintenance -
West mountain Super PwrGate PG40S ~ $135
12 V DC power supply (actually 14 V, but generally referred to as 12 V) ~ around $100
Both widely available from ham radio suppliers online. And wires...
This configuration has been posted several times on this forum - if interested search the forum results with keyword "powergate"
Also, go to the google and type in "Resmed Battery Guide". Resmed already wrote a book for you.
Now provided as a wiki
http://www.apneaboard.com/wiki/index.php..._Solutions Please let me know if you want to edit and you may become a wiki editor too. My hope is that this wiki will have additional solutions and be a source we can point to when this question comes up in the future.