Hi, I got me a raspberry pi 2 model B with UK power standards. Have anyone power this device with a usb power bank that is for charging a smartphone?
Hi, I got me a raspberry pi 2 model B with UK power standards. Have anyone power this device with a usb power bank that is for charging a smartphone?
0.8A should be enough to boot your 'pi. However if the guys who sold you that power bank like to exaggerate, the power bank may sag at currents below 0.8A, which would become "tricky": The 0.8A is close to the specified required current. You can try and see what happens. But be careful: Things might be different when the battery is less full.
All PIs have a voltage regulator. Several in fact. YOU power the PI with 5V, internally it needs (at least) 3.3V, 1.2V, 1.8V and 2.5V. Each is provided by a voltage regulator.
On the PI 1, all of them were provided with linear regulators. Those are inefficient, and one or two of them were replaced by a switching regulator on the PI 2.
It's possible that you see a physically big capacitor on the PI 1. Two options: They found a physically smaller version. Or they decided that such a big capacitor was no longer needed due to the different setup of the RPI. Suboption of the latter: that big capacitor was never really needed anyway....
(I know I have a PI 1 lying around here, that has an EXTRA capacitor soldered on, because (never do this at home!) when hotplugging stuff the pi would otherwise reboot.....)