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Well, an electronic power switch doesn't _have_ to draw current with the
power off (I've done it), but it's certainly _easier_ to design if you allow that. Have you checked that it isn't just the batteries aging? If it has a clock that would drain the battery. You should be able to design a clock that works off a bitty little watch battery for over a year, and consume significantly less current that the batteries natural self-discharge rate, but perhaps the saved a few pennies by using the on-board microprocessor instead of a dedicated low-power clock chip. "Dan McKenzie" wrote in message ... "Frank Olaughlin" wrote in message om... I seem to notice that I get a battery drain on the alkalines in the FT-817, even when it is turned off with nothing else attached (ext power supply). Has anyone else noticed this condition? I've come up with a home brew case that will use a SLA battery to externally power it, but am still concerned about any (even if small) continuous battery drain. Any comments or advice would be appreciated. Thanks! 73 Frank WQ1O Yea, that's normal. The power switch is electronic, meaning the circuitry is always watching it to see if anyone has pushed the power switch. It has to use a little currect to do this, not much, I suppose less than a milliamp, but it will drain batteries eventually. Dan, W9FCC |
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