I purchased a baofeng car charger for my little UV5Rv2 HT. It was advertised to work with the radio, so I didn't think much of it. It turns out, all it does is pass my car electrical system voltage through to the base charger! Looking at the base charger, I see it accepts 10 V input DC and outputs 8.4 V DC and 400 mA current.
So, I thought I could solder a little resistor inline the charger to add additional resistance to produce a lower voltage. It seems this would work for a fixed load, understanding that my car would produce approximately 14.5 V output while running.
So $$ 10 = 0.4 \cdot R $$ produces $$ {10 \over .4} = 25 $$
So the resistance of the charger is approximately 25 $\Omega$, which is maybe where I'm going wrong somewhere, because if I measure resistance across the + and - terminal of the base station while plugged in, I get 10.56 M$\Omega$. Ignoring that and moving on, I need to figure out what the resistance should be for a 400 mA load creating a 4.5 voltage drop.
$ 4.5 = 0.4 \cdot R $ gives me ${4.5 \over .4} = 11.25$. So I figured putting a $11.25\ \Omega$ resistor inline the positive terminal of the car charger might give me the voltage drop I wanted. This is not the case however. So knowing I have a constant load of 14.5 V and a 400 mA load, how do I calculate the size resistor I should be putting inline to drop 4.5 V to hopefully get to approximately 10 V?