I plugged my 48V 10AH ping 1.0 battery directly into the laptop's power supply and... it worked. 
Oddly enough, though, it only seemed to work for one polarity. I thought if it were to convert AC into DC before the switching part, it would work on a full rectifier(Graetz junction, perhaps) and any polarity should work. But, alas, it doesn't. Maybe the power supply is more complex than I thought.
Here are some stats:
PC battery charge 77%.
48V Battery voltage: 52V
At brightest setting, its "resting" current was 1 amp. "working current" varied between 1.1-1.4(peak)(as measured from the ping battery-side), with an average of 1.2 amps. The dimmest setting on the LCD seemed to decrease current by .1 amp
I charged up the laptop's battery to 100% and redid the tests.
48V battery voltage: 52V
At brightest setting, its "resting" current was .6 amp. "working current" varied between .6-1 amp(peak)(as measured from the ping battery-side), with an average of .69 amps. The dimmest setting on the LCD seemed to decrease current by .1 amp.
I also checked standby current usage and for the 77% battery state, it was .4 amps.
The standby usage for the fully charged PC battery was .04 amps.
So, it seems like my laptop normally consumes .65 amps while plugged in(with the PC battery fully charged). At 52V DC, that's 33.8 watts, just 38.2 watts away from the power supply's top power rating of 72 watts(16V ~4.5A). With a 480wh battery, that's 14.2 hours of computing power. With its current rating of ~7.3 AH(Just a few bad cells I need to replace), I realistically have ~10.5 hours of mobile computing power. Add in my laptop's battery's duration of 30 minutes, I have about 11 hours of computing power currently available to me, or ~14.5 hours in the near future. I think that'll be enough for those long trips.
(I just found out that this periodic shrilling from the laptop that happens when the laptop is plugged in, but it thinks it's not(it's draining from the PC battery at that point, according to the battery indicator icon), actually seems to "short" the battery through the power supply as current through the Ping battery was about 1-amp. This heavily suggests that this shrill means something is being shorted out near the laptop's power supply connection. I have not a clue what, though.)
Oddly enough, though, it only seemed to work for one polarity. I thought if it were to convert AC into DC before the switching part, it would work on a full rectifier(Graetz junction, perhaps) and any polarity should work. But, alas, it doesn't. Maybe the power supply is more complex than I thought.
Here are some stats:
PC battery charge 77%.
48V Battery voltage: 52V
At brightest setting, its "resting" current was 1 amp. "working current" varied between 1.1-1.4(peak)(as measured from the ping battery-side), with an average of 1.2 amps. The dimmest setting on the LCD seemed to decrease current by .1 amp
I charged up the laptop's battery to 100% and redid the tests.
48V battery voltage: 52V
At brightest setting, its "resting" current was .6 amp. "working current" varied between .6-1 amp(peak)(as measured from the ping battery-side), with an average of .69 amps. The dimmest setting on the LCD seemed to decrease current by .1 amp.
I also checked standby current usage and for the 77% battery state, it was .4 amps.
The standby usage for the fully charged PC battery was .04 amps.
So, it seems like my laptop normally consumes .65 amps while plugged in(with the PC battery fully charged). At 52V DC, that's 33.8 watts, just 38.2 watts away from the power supply's top power rating of 72 watts(16V ~4.5A). With a 480wh battery, that's 14.2 hours of computing power. With its current rating of ~7.3 AH(Just a few bad cells I need to replace), I realistically have ~10.5 hours of mobile computing power. Add in my laptop's battery's duration of 30 minutes, I have about 11 hours of computing power currently available to me, or ~14.5 hours in the near future. I think that'll be enough for those long trips.
(I just found out that this periodic shrilling from the laptop that happens when the laptop is plugged in, but it thinks it's not(it's draining from the PC battery at that point, according to the battery indicator icon), actually seems to "short" the battery through the power supply as current through the Ping battery was about 1-amp. This heavily suggests that this shrill means something is being shorted out near the laptop's power supply connection. I have not a clue what, though.)