Any electronics gurus in?
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Discussion

RizzoTheRat

Original Poster:

28,149 posts

216 months

Thursday 9th December 2010
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I've got a bedside lamp that has a metal base, you touch it anywhere on the metal and it turns on or off. No idea how it works, and I've never really cared until now.

My mobile phone charger broke the other day so I got a new cheapy one off e-bay, it plugs in right next to the lamp and now when the phone decides it's had enough power the map turns on, which is quite annoying in the middle of the night. Phone charger is the only thing that's changed so I'm assuming it's not coincidence.

Any ideas? I've got part of the charger cable coiled in loop so I might try it with is straight as I assume the lamp is picking up some kind of electric field change.

Simpo Two

91,436 posts

289 months

Thursday 9th December 2010
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I thought they worked on capacitance, but that's where my electronics knowledge stops, sorry.

Cupramax

10,927 posts

276 months

Thursday 9th December 2010
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RizzoTheRat

Original Poster:

28,149 posts

216 months

Thursday 9th December 2010
quotequote all
Interesting, in that case can the charger be affecting it from several inches away, or is something else causing the problem?

callyman

3,186 posts

236 months

Thursday 9th December 2010
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Can you not move the chrger further away or even leave it downstairs to charge for one night to eliminate the possiblility?

RizzoTheRat

Original Poster:

28,149 posts

216 months

Thursday 9th December 2010
quotequote all
That's far too sensible a suggestion biggrin I'll try not charging it overnight tonight to make sure it is the charger, but if it is, I really don't understand the mechanism or how to stop it.

cpas

1,661 posts

264 months

Thursday 9th December 2010
quotequote all
Inductive magnetic field coming of the charging wire or phone effecting the capacitance of the light.