When powering it on for the first time, use a power supply if you have one. Limit the current to 3A. This will keep everything from blowing up if something was connected wrong. Once everything is working using the power supply, you can use the battery. I would highly recommend adding a switch in-between your battery and the circuit.
Once everything is working using the power supply, you can use the battery. I would highly recommend adding a switch in-between your battery and the circuit. It makes it easier to turn the circuit on and off, as well as making it safer. Once you get the circuit working with the battery, you are ready to power your electronic projects!
Using Autodesk Circuits and a lead-acid battery, you can create a circuit that will act as a variable power supply, outputting a range of voltages from 5V to 20V. After creating the power supply you could drive motors using variable voltage, power microcontrollers, logic circuits, LED strings, analog circuits, and much more.
This type of power supply is often referred to as a single rail supply and provides 0V and +V. Most beginner projects only use a single rail supply, so batteries and wall warts make good power sources.
Most uninterrupted power supplies sold for computers 'switch' power, running a small inverter when power is interrupted, then switching back to 'normal' power when it's back on. This one simply produces AC power with a continuous duty inverter and assumes some system (s) will charge the DC battery supply it requires faster than it consumes it.
Almost no designer gets it right on their first try! When powering it on for the first time, use a power supply if you have one. Limit the current to 3A. This will keep everything from blowing up if something was connected wrong. Once everything is working using the power supply, you can use the battery.