Kittyhawk
Established Member
Need some help with this one please, electricity is not my forte.
I have a small heater dehumidifier box thing used for drying hearing aids overnight. The box is fed power from a 240v household socket via a little transformer with a standard USB outlet on it and a USB cable from it (the transformer) to the drying box.
The transformer output is 5V, 0.3A. The box is 5V, 0.5A.
So, using the water in a pipe analogy, volts = pressure and amps = flow then you can't muck around with the volts but I don't understand the amps side of it. Is it so that a device will only consume the amps that it requires to run whatever amps are actually available to it?
The reason I ask is because I have a motorhome fitted with USB outlets that put out 5V, 3 amps.
Can I plug the USB cable from the drying box into these 3amp plugs without frying the box?
I have a small heater dehumidifier box thing used for drying hearing aids overnight. The box is fed power from a 240v household socket via a little transformer with a standard USB outlet on it and a USB cable from it (the transformer) to the drying box.
The transformer output is 5V, 0.3A. The box is 5V, 0.5A.
So, using the water in a pipe analogy, volts = pressure and amps = flow then you can't muck around with the volts but I don't understand the amps side of it. Is it so that a device will only consume the amps that it requires to run whatever amps are actually available to it?
The reason I ask is because I have a motorhome fitted with USB outlets that put out 5V, 3 amps.
Can I plug the USB cable from the drying box into these 3amp plugs without frying the box?