Hi All!
I am often asked if I use a buffer battery with my Tout Terrainn The Plug 2 and P.A.T. amplifier cable.
The answer so far has been "no, not yet". This will all change the day I take a computer with me. Its greater energy needs cannot be met with my current (sorry) setup, and will require a buffer battery. I have been a bit resistant to take a buffer battery because it adds both weight and bulk. If it is of high-capacity, it provides a lot of juice for a long time. The downside is that energy-dense batteries take a long, long time to recharge from empty with an on-bike charger when away from the mains for an extended period. Therefore, one has to adopt a trickle-charge strategyto keep them topped-off.
The other side of the argument is...if the buffer battery has sufficient capacity and USB outlets, one can take fewer dedicated batteries, charge off the buffer battery as you go...and have a bit of reserve before you have to charge, from the bike or a wall outlet. Of course, most of the drawbacks of a buffer battery go away if you remember to recharge the buffer from the mains while at a motel. It is when one is away from mains power for extended periods that the good and bad of a buffer fully emerge.
Meanwhile, I'm topping-off my batteries as I ride and using my AA/AAA batteries as my mini-buffer for replaceable batteries (Eneloops and Sony-branded Eneloop with high Amp/Hr ratings and an Eneloop AA/AAA charger. Dense batteries last longer but take longer to recharge), then charging my embedded batteries as I go. It takes about two to four hours' riding to fully recharge a depleted pair of AA/AAA batteries with my setup. Any gadget whose charge ratings are based on 1A charging rates will take twice as long when filled with by 0.5A source like The Plug. I chose gadgets with really good battery life whenever possible, and with USB charging. If they didn't allow USB charging, I made my own adapters to do so after checking on power requirements:
Items using AA batteries (two of my my most important items):
= GPS (2AA, usu. start with Lithiums, then switch to Eneloops; can be powered in real-time with Dan-hacked power cord to The Plug)
= SteriPen water purifier (4AA). I went with the Classic for the AA cells...the RCR123's take a lot longer to charge but are more energy-dense; a tradeoff for a more common size.
Items using AAA batteries:
= Auxiliary LED blinky taillight (2AAA, 30/65 hrs' use)
= LED headlight (for me to wear around camp, 3AAA, 115 hrs' use)
= AM/FM/Weather radio (1AAA, 12-54 hrs' use)
Embedded (not user-changeable):
= Panasonic electric shaver (holds charge good for 2 weeks' shaving, eliminates need for water). Dan-hacked USB cable.
= MP3 player (Li-Po, good for 11hrs' use).
= GoPro camera (changeable, but I charge in-camera to save the weight of another charger; carry 3 charged spares. Battery life varies greatly depending on 720 vs 1080 video, and LCD back use)
= Samsung/Flip Mino vidcam (good for an hour on each charge)
Other:
= Cell phone (an old 3G "dumb" phone that almost always connects if it is at all possible to do so). Another of my most important items. Batteries charged in-phone, with at least 6 charged batteries on-hand. Phone is my lifeline. Dan-hacked USB cable.
= Chinese eBay clip-on USB charger for my other digicam/vidcam combo, with 6 charged spares, since this is my primary camera.
Carry:
= 3 1A USB "micro-cube" wall chargers and a threaded bulb socket-to-AC plug adapter so I can charge where there is a light bulb, 1 1A/2A USB charger for an automobile lighter/charger socket so I can quick-charge off a motorist's system if necessary.
= Reel-type USB cord with assorted ends to fit my gadgets, plus Dan-hacked adapters where none were available (GPS, phone, shaver).
= Charged spare batteries for my gadgets. How many depends on energy consumption, use, and critical need. The phone gets first priority, followed closely by the GPS (the two spare compasses I take require no power at all). The water purifier can be swapped-out in favor of chemical treatment or boiling.
So far, if I leave home with the items fully charged and any spare batteries fully charged, then swapping the depleted items onto The Plug or topping off at the rare but occasional restaurant or motel with the 1A wall chargers does the trick. The "big" items to keep going are the Phone, GPS, and water purifier. Everything else I coud get by without, so I assign lower priority in the charging queue.
Add an iPad or similar carry-along computer "someday", and I'll need to go the buffer-battery route, no question. The trouble is, the buffer battery adds both weight and bulk if it is of sufficient capacity to really count. The good news is if it has a USB output, it can charge everything else as well, minimizing the need to carry as many individual spares.
Best,
Dan.