@Sc0rp1c Usually a 180 W netto converter should do. If your cigarette lighter is fused with 15A then it should do, and deliver at least continous 230 V and 160-170 watts. Did you check at all if there is 230 V on the AC Outlet of the converter? Second step, connect the orginal 230 V charger to the converter AC outlet. Measure if the DC loading plug delivers the needed 19 V After this, everything positivly confirmed, connect it to your Laptop. And the charging LED should be lightened. If not, it could have basically two or three reasons, except a loose cable connection: 1. It's no sinus wave converter, and the charging setup needs a pure sinus wave --> test a better converter which delivers a sinus wave. 2. Your Laptop battery is completely drained, then it sucks the fully needed 9.5 A by 19 V, which these 180 W the small converter can not cope with and switches off; or your cigarette lighter fuse is gone. Often only a 10 A fuse is used. If the battery is already charged by 50 % or more, the charging process drains much less currency, only half the amperage or less is needed to keep the charging process going. Therewith the converter should be able to cope. 3. Test it with an almost fully charged Notebook battery, then the surge for high power should be much lower. At least your battery stays much longer. If you do not play just the most currency consuming games with highest settings. 4. If you have to connect to the cars battery poles anyway, then take a 250 -- 300W converter at least. (Don't forget to put a fuse in the positive lead!) The higher the wattage the higher the power dissapation; means the netto wattage is about 80 - 85 % only. Which leaves from 250 W around 200 W. Plus the loss by your cable connection has to be taken into consideration, depending on it's length. @Sc0rp1c @ schrieb: ...you need Plug inverter by cable to your battery. And that sad because i wont do that everyday in other truck at work In a truck at work, maybe on the freeways, you shouldn'd make use of it at all! daddle
... View more