On Sun, Sep 29, 2013 at 8:50 AM, Dr. David Alan Gilbert <dave@treblig.org> wrote:
* Arokux X (arokux@gmail.com) wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 29, 2013 at 2:56 PM, luke.leighton <luke.leighton@gmail.com> wrote:
> > On Sun, Sep 29, 2013 at 1:48 PM, Arokux X <arokux@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> Hi all,
> >>
> >> I am probably once again asking for something that is not there, but
> >> anyway. I'm currently hacking on several single board computers. Each
> >> of them requires 12V. So I would need an AC to DC power adapter for
> >> each. Each of adapters will require a separate socket in my master
> >> plug. What I would like to have is _one_ AC to DC adapter with
> >> multiple outputs to which I then connect my boards. Basically
> >> something like a USB hub but for power supply. After much of googling
> >> I wasn't able to find something like this. Have I missed something?
> >
> >  get some parts off of farnell and a soldering iron.  one socket,
> > several wires, many plugs.
>
> How about the power? Will those "some parts" be able to support 25W output?
>
> And additional requirement for the all-in-one power adapter showed up.
> Some board require 5V, not 12. So I need several outputs with 12V and
> several outputs with 5V.

Have you tried a normal PC power supply; I think there is a way to fudge
them to believe a motherboard is connected.

Dave
--


THis would actually be your best/cheapest solution on the interim. You short Pin 14 to GND on the ATX Power Supply Connector. this allows it to power on automatically. If you want to get more sophisticated, you can then wire in a switch, or take some perfboard, order an ATX Female connector, some DIP Molex Board connectors, and wire it up with any number of outputs. It's how I've been powering my MEB, externally SATA HDD, and misc devices.  

--
Christopher Thomas
Firemoth Industries, LLC - Owner
christopher@firemothindustries.com
214-458-5990