Make: Projects

$3. Solar Powered Cell Phone Charger.

Build a Solar Powered Cell Phone Charger from a few dollar store items and a few parts.

  • By Kevin Wrycraft
  • Category: Electronics, Energy
  • Time Required: 15-30 minutes
  • Difficulty: Moderate
$3. Solar Powered Cell Phone Charger.

Hacking two simple pieces of electronics for a new purpose. Not for those who use their phones a lot, although it could have other purposes, MP3 player charger or anything that charges from a usb connection.

Steps

Step #1:

Next
$3. Solar Powered Cell Phone Charger.
  • Star with a dollar store solar garden light.

Step #2:

Next
$3. Solar Powered Cell Phone Charger.
  • Twist the housing off to expose the led and diffuser.

Step #3:

Next
$3. Solar Powered Cell Phone Charger.
  • Twist off the diffuser to expose the led. Inside the battery compartment on this one you'll see a AAA NiMH 300Ma. Some models have a large capacitor instead. Put the battery cover back on.

Step #4:

Next
$3. Solar Powered Cell Phone Charger.
  • Sometimes they twist apart, or you may have to remove a few small screws to get inside. You can see the two wires leading from the solar cell on top going to the board. I'll snip the led (checking polarity with a charged battery and a multimeter) and use those leads for later hook up.

Step #5:

Next
$3. Solar Powered Cell Phone Charger.
  • Again, at the dollar store I found a AA battery powered emergency cell phone charger with a variety of tips including the mini USB used by my Crackberry. Cracked it open to remove a small pc board that basically transforms 1.5v into something over 5v. Enough to give a little charge to my phone. Sorry 'bout the fuzzy shot, I was drunk when I took it.

Step #6:

Next
$3. Solar Powered Cell Phone Charger.
  • I used a little piece of double sided tape (hot glue gun would work just as well) to stick the charger pc board into the solar light housing and soldered the two leads fro the light to the corresponding leads on the charger.

Step #7:

Next
$3. Solar Powered Cell Phone Charger.
  • Put the housing back together and if you can, coil up the excess wire to the plug. I added an old rubber foot with self adhesive tape I found in my parts bin. It keeps it from sliding around on my dashboard

Step #8:

$3. Solar Powered Cell Phone Charger.
  • Voila! It sits on my dash, charges the AAA battery during the day and when it gets dark, it automatically sends power to the charger and then to my phone. I keep my phone in the glovebox for emergencies and this way it's always charged. And all for under three smackers.

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

%d bloggers like this: