Powering Laptop
I have a few thoughs on laptop power since I went through this myself when I was living on my boat. First - if you are going to run your laptop through an inverter. Make absolutely sure that either your inverter outputs a true sine wave instead of a modified sine, or that your laptop charger doesn't care. You can fry eithr your charger, or on laptops where the transformer is actually inside the chasis - there are still a few like that out there - you can damage the mainboard. This is why most laptop manufacturers will void your service agreement if you use an inverter - Dell, Gateway, and Compaq included at least for systems available a year or so ago. Next, computers do not use 12 volt internals. The actual voltages vary from system to system depending on chip set, board, and processor. Typically between 4 and 6 volts. Using the OEM (or equivilant; I don't like using non-OEM stuff on things that are still under service) DC adapter should be the most efficient since you are not going to need to invert it.Make sure that you leave the battery in the system so that it doesn't have to run on the DC power coming in the port alone. If for some reason you have a voltage drop and you have the system running off of input DC power only you can ruin your system by browning it out.Last, be aware that salt air can destroy non-marinized circuit boards. Again, most manfacturers will void you for taking you laptop to sea. Friends learned this the hard way. I was refused service on my cell phone when it died after living on my boat for a few weeks because the service center could tell it had been exposed to salt air. It had never gotten wet.As always, YMMV -Justin - O'day Owners' Web