• 2024
  • Aug
  • 12

The PACO B-10 Battery Eliminator and Charger

I picked this guy up at the Columbus Hamfest for $5. It claims to be a power supply of sorts, and a battery charger. It is lopsidedly heavy. So at minimum, there’s a nice big transformer in the thing, if all else fails.

It’s fairly unassuming from the outside. The front has the business end of the device - two meters, output terminals, output adjust, and a couple of switches.

pacob10-front-wereboar.jpg

As a note, this thing is only 6 and 12 volt, with a little wiggle room.

The back and sides are just as unassuming, nothing except some vents, the cord, and a serial number.

pacob10-side1-wereboar.jpg

pacob10-side2-wereboar.jpg

pacob10-back-wereboar.jpg

You’d think there’s some sort of regulation in this device, right? Wrong.

pacob10-schematic-wereboar.jpg

There’s pretty much nothing inside of this guy. Apparently, the only regulation is YOU, and that’s by turning the dial on the front of the device!

Inside, it’s a history lesson in electronics.

pacob10-chassis-wereboar.jpg

Lots of cloth-coated solid wire and big wads of copper and metal make up this device.

pacob10-choke-wereboar.jpg

Here’s the power transformer, two giant sized but comparatively small value capacitors, and a giant choke in the middle that hides the voltage adjust tap.

pacob10-capacitor-wereboar.jpg

Here’s some boom cans, aka old capacitors. These claim to have been made by Pyramid in 1958. 6000uF at 20V - these can be replaced by 6800@25 for about $4 each, and two of them would fit handily in the space taken by one, with room to spare!

No, I’m not going to try and charge them!

pacob10-selenium-wereboar.jpg

Last, we have the business end of the device. The rectifiers - in this case, giant selenium plates. I wonder what kind of condition these things are in. Are rotten eggs in my future?

This is certainly a product of it’s time - it’s interesting in that it’s a battery charger not made by one of the companies that did such things at the time, but also tries to be a primitive DC supply for device bench testing. Now, of course, we’d just grab a 20A switcher, but this thing was what you had in the 50s.

Is it going to go back in service? Not until I can at least get some new capacitors, but even then - it may just end up as nice power supply transformer in a box. Who knows where this is going…

These pictures were accepted by Radiomuseum for one of their exhibits. Check them out! https://www.radiomus … minator_kit_b.html#a