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Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
Hi, folks - If you please, I am looking for recommendations for a PS
that will provide the usual 12 or 13.8v, about 5 - 7 amps be plenty. Love to get rid of the myriad 500 ma wall-warts. I'd rather not have it be too expensive, but it would be nice if it didn't send spikes, blow up or cause hash or electrical hum. Any thoughts? There is a plethora of manufacturers and models, reviews are all over the place, I have no idea which ones are OK. Pyramid makes a 5-amp job that would be great, if it's any good. I also see Radio Shack PSs at about twice that current. Would a switching PS be better? Thanks in advance ~ Bruce Jensen |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On 2/10/10 12:38 , bpnjensen wrote:
Hi, folks - If you please, I am looking for recommendations for a PS that will provide the usual 12 or 13.8v, about 5 - 7 amps be plenty. Love to get rid of the myriad 500 ma wall-warts. I'd rather not have it be too expensive, but it would be nice if it didn't send spikes, blow up or cause hash or electrical hum. Any thoughts? There is a plethora of manufacturers and models, reviews are all over the place, I have no idea which ones are OK. Pyramid makes a 5-amp job that would be great, if it's any good. I also see Radio Shack PSs at about twice that current. Would a switching PS be better? Thanks in advance ~ Bruce Jensen A switching supply may actually become another source of hash, depending on shielding, which usually, isn't so good. There are measures to attenuate the noise, though. It takes some doing. Definitely not plug an play, if noise is a issue. I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. Go to MCMelectronics.com and look at some of the Tenma supplies. Cost effective, and they do what you need. There are dozens of other makes. Things to look for: Voltage range. Range of current delivery and at what voltages max current is available. Meters for both current and voltage are nice. (Volt meter more important than current meter. If you dial up the right voltage, the radios will only take the current they need. Anything beyond a modest current reserve can be dialed back for safety. Without a current meter, if you dial back the current output of the power supply below the draw, you'll see a voltage drop at the radio.) Lots of cooling vents. Heavy input cable. 30A binding posts at the output. You can even find a good power supply used on e-Bay. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 10, 10:55*am, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 2/10/10 12:38 , bpnjensen wrote: Hi, folks - If you please, I am looking for recommendations for a PS that will provide the usual 12 or 13.8v, about 5 - 7 amps be plenty. Love to get rid of the myriad 500 ma wall-warts. *I'd rather not have it be too expensive, but it would be nice if it didn't send spikes, blow up or cause hash or electrical hum. *Any thoughts? *There is a plethora of manufacturers and models, reviews are all over the place, I have no idea which ones are OK. *Pyramid makes a 5-amp job that would be great, if it's any good. *I also see Radio Shack PSs at about twice that current. *Would a switching PS be better? Thanks in advance ~ Bruce Jensen * *A switching supply may actually become another source of hash, depending on shielding, which usually, isn't so good. There are measures to attenuate the noise, though. It takes some doing. Definitely not plug an play, if noise is a issue. * *I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. * *Go to MCMelectronics.com and look at some of the Tenma supplies. Cost effective, and they do what you need. * *There are dozens of other makes. * *Things to look for: * *Voltage range. * *Range of current delivery and at what voltages max current is available. * *Meters for both current and voltage are nice. (Volt meter more important than current meter. If you dial up the right voltage, the radios will only take the current they need. Anything beyond a modest current reserve can be dialed back for safety. Without a current meter, if you dial back the current output of the power supply below the draw, you'll see a voltage drop at the radio.) * *Lots of cooling vents. * *Heavy input cable. * *30A binding posts at the output. * *You can even find a good power supply used on e-Bay. Thanks Peter - I had a feeling you'd have some good info on this :-) |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On 2/10/10 13:11 , bpnjensen wrote:
On Feb 10, 10:55 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 12:38 , bpnjensen wrote: Hi, folks - If you please, I am looking for recommendations for a PS that will provide the usual 12 or 13.8v, about 5 - 7 amps be plenty. Love to get rid of the myriad 500 ma wall-warts. I'd rather not have it be too expensive, but it would be nice if it didn't send spikes, blow up or cause hash or electrical hum. Any thoughts? There is a plethora of manufacturers and models, reviews are all over the place, I have no idea which ones are OK. Pyramid makes a 5-amp job that would be great, if it's any good. I also see Radio Shack PSs at about twice that current. Would a switching PS be better? Thanks in advance ~ Bruce Jensen A switching supply may actually become another source of hash, depending on shielding, which usually, isn't so good. There are measures to attenuate the noise, though. It takes some doing. Definitely not plug an play, if noise is a issue. I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. Go to MCMelectronics.com and look at some of the Tenma supplies. Cost effective, and they do what you need. There are dozens of other makes. Things to look for: Voltage range. Range of current delivery and at what voltages max current is available. Meters for both current and voltage are nice. (Volt meter more important than current meter. If you dial up the right voltage, the radios will only take the current they need. Anything beyond a modest current reserve can be dialed back for safety. Without a current meter, if you dial back the current output of the power supply below the draw, you'll see a voltage drop at the radio.) Lots of cooling vents. Heavy input cable. 30A binding posts at the output. You can even find a good power supply used on e-Bay. Thanks Peter - I had a feeling you'd have some good info on this :-) Oh yeah. I'm just full of it. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
"D. Peter Maus" wrote: On 2/10/10 12:38 , bpnjensen wrote: Hi, folks - If you please, I am looking for recommendations for a PS that will provide the usual 12 or 13.8v, about 5 - 7 amps be plenty. Love to get rid of the myriad 500 ma wall-warts. I'd rather not have it be too expensive, but it would be nice if it didn't send spikes, blow up or cause hash or electrical hum. Any thoughts? There is a plethora of manufacturers and models, reviews are all over the place, I have no idea which ones are OK. Pyramid makes a 5-amp job that would be great, if it's any good. I also see Radio Shack PSs at about twice that current. Would a switching PS be better? Thanks in advance ~ Bruce Jensen A switching supply may actually become another source of hash, depending on shielding, which usually, isn't so good. There are measures to attenuate the noise, though. It takes some doing. Definitely not plug an play, if noise is a issue. I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. Go to MCMelectronics.com and look at some of the Tenma supplies. Cost effective, and they do what you need. There are dozens of other makes. Things to look for: Voltage range. Range of current delivery and at what voltages max current is available. Meters for both current and voltage are nice. (Volt meter more important than current meter. If you dial up the right voltage, the radios will only take the current they need. Anything beyond a modest current reserve can be dialed back for safety. Without a current meter, if you dial back the current output of the power supply below the draw, you'll see a voltage drop at the radio.) Lots of cooling vents. Heavy input cable. 30A binding posts at the output. You can even find a good power supply used on e-Bay. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On 2/10/10 16:41 , dxAce wrote:
"D. Peter Maus" wrote: I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. May be where I got the idea. It's a great PS. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 10, 3:08*pm, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 2/10/10 16:41 , dxAce wrote: "D. Peter Maus" wrote: * * I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. * *May be where I got the idea. * *It's a great PS. You could probably power a dozen R7s with 20 amps!. I'm shooting for the Astron 7 amp job - that should tide me over. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On 2/10/10 21:34 , bpnjensen wrote:
On Feb 10, 3:08 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 16:41 , dxAce wrote: "D. Peter Maus" wrote: I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. May be where I got the idea. It's a great PS. You could probably power a dozen R7s with 20 amps!. I'm shooting for the Astron 7 amp job - that should tide me over. In boating...they call it '2 foot-itis.' In audio we call it a '4-track fix.' No matter how bit a boat you have, you find it's just about 2 foot shy of what you need for a really good party. No matter how many channels you have, you find you need 4 more channels for the right mix. If you're figuring 7 amps, within a year, you'll be looking for 2 more amps. Think future growth. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 10, 10:56*pm, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 2/10/10 21:34 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 3:08 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 16:41 , dxAce wrote: "D. Peter Maus" wrote: * * *I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. * * May be where I got the idea. * * It's a great PS. You could probably power a dozen R7s with 20 amps!. *I'm shooting for the Astron 7 amp job - that should tide me over. * *In boating...they call it *'2 foot-itis.' In audio we call it a '4-track fix.' * *No matter how bit a boat you have, you find it's just about 2 foot shy of what you need for a really good party. No matter how many channels you have, you find you need 4 more channels for the right mix. * *If you're figuring 7 amps, within a year, you'll be looking for 2 more amps. * *Think future growth.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Absolutely! I always expect to have a safe operating environment, and a bigger power supply is a must, not an overkill. In industrial installations, which run around the clock, p.s. are mandatory to be much heftier than what seems necessary to handle the usual load, so nothing terrible could possibly occur in the worth case scenario. At home I played with 12V gell cells for awhile, and was planning to acquire a deep discharge cycle battery from Sears, eventually. By the way Pyramid's p.s.current rating cannot be trusted.The 7 amp claim to supply a constant current is just not possible at all. Their ratings (and of many,many other brands) are based upon intermittent(!) use only. Actually, building a decent medium size (10 -15 Amp) regulated linear p.s. is not that difficult and parts are widely available from discarded electronics. P.S. Switching p.s. should be avoided by all means,if possible. Just look how much RF the new florescent bulbs are causing lately. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 10, 8:55*pm, wrote:
On Feb 10, 10:56*pm, "D. Peter Maus" wrote: On 2/10/10 21:34 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 3:08 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 16:41 , dxAce wrote: "D. Peter Maus" wrote: * * *I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. * * May be where I got the idea. * * It's a great PS. You could probably power a dozen R7s with 20 amps!. *I'm shooting for the Astron 7 amp job - that should tide me over. * *In boating...they call it *'2 foot-itis.' In audio we call it a '4-track fix.' * *No matter how bit a boat you have, you find it's just about 2 foot shy of what you need for a really good party. No matter how many channels you have, you find you need 4 more channels for the right mix. * *If you're figuring 7 amps, within a year, you'll be looking for 2 more amps. * *Think future growth.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - * * * * * * * * * * Absolutely! I always expect to have a safe operating environment, and a bigger power supply is a must, not an overkill. In industrial installations, which run around the clock, p.s. are mandatory to be much heftier than what seems necessary to handle the usual load, so nothing terrible could possibly occur in the worth case scenario. At home I played with 12V gell cells for awhile, and was planning to acquire a deep discharge cycle battery from Sears, eventually. *By the way Pyramid's p.s.current rating cannot be trusted.The 7 amp claim to supply a constant *current is just not possible at all. Their ratings (and of many,many other brands) are based upon intermittent(!) use only. Actually, building a decent medium size (10 -15 Amp) regulated linear p.s. is not that difficult and parts are widely available from discarded electronics. P.S. * Switching p.s. should be avoided by all means,if possible. Just look how much RF the new florescent bulbs are causing lately. Thanks Peter and Arthur - right now and foreseeably, my total demand at maximum is probably 3 amps. One main radio (Icom R75 - maxes at about 1 amp), a MFJ-1026 (500 - 600 ma) and maybe one other small RX or dsp unit at a time (1 amp max). All the other things I have do just great on 115 VAC. This, after 4 decades of s-l-o-w collecting! I have no TX and do not intend to resurrect my ancient ham license, so that sort of larger drain will never happen. So, at 5 amps continuous on the unit I am thinking about, that will already give me another 100% of headroom to play with. I know I'm a bit odd in this respect ;-), but I don't collect stuff to run simultaneously (My entire active shack at any one time fits on 3 square feet of tabletop). I could get a ~12 amp I guess, but that would be considerable overkill for anything I can foresee. Not figuring on the Pyramid any more. You guys and some research have pretty much talked me into Astron :-) Bruce |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On 2/10/10 23:15 , bpnjensen wrote:
On Feb 10, 8:55 pm, wrote: On Feb 10, 10:56 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 21:34 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 3:08 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 16:41 , dxAce wrote: "D. Peter Maus" wrote: I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. May be where I got the idea. It's a great PS. You could probably power a dozen R7s with 20 amps!. I'm shooting for the Astron 7 amp job - that should tide me over. In boating...they call it '2 foot-itis.' In audio we call it a '4-track fix.' No matter how bit a boat you have, you find it's just about 2 foot shy of what you need for a really good party. No matter how many channels you have, you find you need 4 more channels for the right mix. If you're figuring 7 amps, within a year, you'll be looking for 2 more amps. Think future growth.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Absolutely! I always expect to have a safe operating environment, and a bigger power supply is a must, not an overkill. In industrial installations, which run around the clock, p.s. are mandatory to be much heftier than what seems necessary to handle the usual load, so nothing terrible could possibly occur in the worth case scenario. At home I played with 12V gell cells for awhile, and was planning to acquire a deep discharge cycle battery from Sears, eventually. By the way Pyramid's p.s.current rating cannot be trusted.The 7 amp claim to supply a constant current is just not possible at all. Their ratings (and of many,many other brands) are based upon intermittent(!) use only. Actually, building a decent medium size (10 -15 Amp) regulated linear p.s. is not that difficult and parts are widely available from discarded electronics. P.S. Switching p.s. should be avoided by all means,if possible. Just look how much RF the new florescent bulbs are causing lately. Thanks Peter and Arthur - right now and foreseeably, my total demand at maximum is probably 3 amps. One main radio (Icom R75 - maxes at about 1 amp), a MFJ-1026 (500 - 600 ma) and maybe one other small RX or dsp unit at a time (1 amp max). All the other things I have do just great on 115 VAC. This, after 4 decades of s-l-o-w collecting! I have no TX and do not intend to resurrect my ancient ham license, so that sort of larger drain will never happen. So, at 5 amps continuous on the unit I am thinking about, that will already give me another 100% of headroom to play with. I know I'm a bit odd in this respect ;-), but I don't collect stuff to run simultaneously (My entire active shack at any one time fits on 3 square feet of tabletop). I could get a ~12 amp I guess, but that would be considerable overkill for anything I can foresee. Arthur makes a pretty good point. PS ratings assume intermittent service. Continuous current rating is based on a limited time of service...a few minutes...against unlimited continuous demand. The result is not a lack of current, but an abundance of heat. And subsequent failure. In much the same way ham transmitters used for pirate stations experience failure. They can make their rated output, but they can't sustain it beyond an intermittent, conversational exchange. They can make half their rated output, but they often can't sustain that indefinitely either. The problem being inability to dispose of component heat. So, look for a PS that can maintain your demand, plus a decent reserve and do it indefinitely, without component overheating. Most 'continuous' ratings do not actually reflect unlimited duration. Not figuring on the Pyramid any more. You guys and some research have pretty much talked me into Astron :-) A good choice. Don't skimp. You may regret spending the extra money, but you'll never regret having the extra capacity. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 11, 1:01*am, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 2/10/10 23:15 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 8:55 pm, wrote: On Feb 10, 10:56 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 21:34 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 3:08 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 16:41 , dxAce wrote: "D. Peter Maus" wrote: * * * I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. * * *May be where I got the idea. * * *It's a great PS. You could probably power a dozen R7s with 20 amps!. *I'm shooting for the Astron 7 amp job - that should tide me over. * * In boating...they call it *'2 foot-itis.' In audio we call it a '4-track fix.' * * No matter how bit a boat you have, you find it's just about 2 foot shy of what you need for a really good party. No matter how many channels you have, you find you need 4 more channels for the right mix. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
bpnjensen wrote:
Hi, folks - If you please, I am looking for recommendations for a PS that will provide the usual 12 or 13.8v, about 5 - 7 amps be plenty. Love to get rid of the myriad 500 ma wall-warts. I'd rather not have it be too expensive, but it would be nice if it didn't send spikes, blow up or cause hash or electrical hum. Any thoughts? There is a plethora of manufacturers and models, reviews are all over the place, I have no idea which ones are OK. Pyramid makes a 5-amp job that would be great, if it's any good. I also see Radio Shack PSs at about twice that current. Would a switching PS be better? Thanks in advance ~ Bruce Jensen I use an Astron switch mode supply. It makes no noise. It makes no heat. Linear supplies waste electricity. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 10, 10:27*pm, wrote:
On Feb 11, 1:01*am, "D. Peter Maus" wrote: On 2/10/10 23:15 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 8:55 pm, wrote: On Feb 10, 10:56 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 21:34 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 3:08 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 16:41 , dxAce wrote: "D. Peter Maus" wrote: * * * I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. * * *May be where I got the idea. * * *It's a great PS. You could probably power a dozen R7s with 20 amps!. *I'm shooting for the Astron 7 amp job - that should tide me over. * * In boating...they call it *'2 foot-itis.' In audio we call it a '4-track fix.' * * No matter how bit a boat you have, you find it's just about 2 foot shy of what you need for a really good party. No matter how many channels you have, you find you need 4 more channels for the right mix. * * If you're figuring 7 amps, within a year, you'll be looking for 2 more amps. * * Think future growth.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - * * * * * * * * * * *Absolutely! I always expect to have a safe operating environment, and a bigger power supply is a must, not an overkill. In industrial installations, which run around the clock, p.s. are mandatory to be much heftier than what seems necessary to handle the usual load, so nothing terrible could possibly occur in the worth case scenario. At home I played with 12V gell cells for awhile, and was planning to acquire a deep discharge cycle battery from Sears, eventually. *By the way Pyramid's p.s.current rating cannot be trusted.The 7 amp claim to supply a constant *current is just not possible at all. Their ratings (and of many,many other brands) are based upon intermittent(!) use only. Actually, building a decent medium size (10 -15 Amp) regulated linear p.s. is not that difficult and parts are widely available from discarded electronics. P.S. * Switching p.s. should be avoided by all means,if possible. Just look how much RF the new florescent bulbs are causing lately. Thanks Peter and Arthur - right now and foreseeably, my total demand at maximum is probably 3 amps. *One main radio (Icom R75 - maxes at about 1 amp), a MFJ-1026 (500 - 600 ma) and maybe one other small RX or dsp unit at a time (1 amp max). *All the other things I have do just great on 115 VAC. *This, after 4 decades of s-l-o-w collecting! I have no TX and do not intend to resurrect my ancient ham license, so that sort of larger drain will never happen. So, at 5 amps continuous on the unit I am thinking about, that will already give me another 100% of headroom to play with. *I know I'm a bit odd in this respect ;-), but I don't collect stuff to run simultaneously (My entire active shack at any one time fits on 3 square feet of tabletop). I could get a ~12 amp I guess, but that would be considerable overkill for anything I can foresee. * *Arthur makes a pretty good point. PS ratings assume intermittent service. Continuous current rating is based on a limited time of service...a few minutes...against unlimited continuous demand. The result is not a lack of current, but an abundance of heat. And subsequent failure. In much the same way ham transmitters used for pirate stations experience failure. They can make their rated output, but they can't sustain it beyond an intermittent, conversational exchange. They can make half their rated output, but they often can't sustain that indefinitely either. The problem being inability to dispose of component heat. * *So, look for a PS that can maintain your demand, plus a decent reserve and do it indefinitely, without component overheating. Most 'continuous' ratings do not actually reflect unlimited duration. * Not figuring on the Pyramid any more. You guys and some research *have pretty much talked me into Astron :-) * *A good choice. Don't skimp. You may regret spending the extra money, but you'll never regret having the extra capacity.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - *Amen. Oh, nearly forgotten. Latest *RShack's power supplies may be even worse than some of the cheapest brands on the market!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks - Yeah, I gave up on considering RS awhile back. Currently, I the only things I get at RS are phone plugs and hookup wire. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 11, 6:59*am, dave wrote:
bpnjensen wrote: Hi, folks - If you please, I am looking for recommendations for a PS that will provide the usual 12 or 13.8v, about 5 - 7 amps be plenty. Love to get rid of the myriad 500 ma wall-warts. *I'd rather not have it be too expensive, but it would be nice if it didn't send spikes, blow up or cause hash or electrical hum. *Any thoughts? *There is a plethora of manufacturers and models, reviews are all over the place, I have no idea which ones are OK. *Pyramid makes a 5-amp job that would be great, if it's any good. *I also see Radio Shack PSs at about twice that current. *Would a switching PS be better? Thanks in advance ~ Bruce Jensen I use an Astron switch mode supply. *It makes no noise. *It makes no heat. *Linear supplies waste electricity. No hash or other electrical noise artifacts? |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
Thanks Peter and Arthur - right now and foreseeably, my total demand
at maximum is probably 3 amps. One main radio (Icom R75 - maxes at about 1 amp), a MFJ-1026 (500 - 600 ma) and maybe one other small RX or dsp unit at a time (1 amp max). All the other things I have do just great on 115 VAC. This, after 4 decades of s-l-o-w collecting! I have no TX and do not intend to resurrect my ancient ham license, so that sort of larger drain will never happen. So, at 5 amps continuous on the unit I am thinking about, that will already give me another 100% of headroom to play with. I know I'm a bit odd in this respect ;-), but I don't collect stuff to run simultaneously (My entire active shack at any one time fits on 3 square feet of tabletop). I could get a ~12 amp I guess, but that would be considerable overkill for anything I can foresee. Not figuring on the Pyramid any more. You guys and some research have pretty much talked me into Astron :-) Bruce You might try checking out other brands. I have a Kikusui I got locally for a very reasonable price and it is a very nice power supply (0-18V, 4.5A max.). There's a nice Kikusui on eBay right now - item 320485731691. Just a thought. HP power supplies are also plentious. I have an Astron RS-35M and are well pleased with it but I think for your purposes, it might be overkill. You could always build a nicely-regulated power supply as well. It isn't hard to do... Barry - N4BUQ |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 11, 1:37*pm, "Barry" wrote:
Thanks Peter and Arthur - right now and foreseeably, my total demand at maximum is probably 3 amps. *One main radio (Icom R75 - maxes at about 1 amp), a MFJ-1026 (500 - 600 ma) and maybe one other small RX or dsp unit at a time (1 amp max). *All the other things I have do just great on 115 VAC. *This, after 4 decades of s-l-o-w collecting! I have no TX and do not intend to resurrect my ancient ham license, so that sort of larger drain will never happen. So, at 5 amps continuous on the unit I am thinking about, that will already give me another 100% of headroom to play with. *I know I'm a bit odd in this respect ;-), but I don't collect stuff to run simultaneously (My entire active shack at any one time fits on 3 square feet of tabletop). I could get a ~12 amp I guess, but that would be considerable overkill for anything I can foresee. *Not figuring on the Pyramid any more. You guys and some research *have pretty much talked me into Astron :-) Bruce You might try checking out other brands. *I have a Kikusui I got locally for a very reasonable price and it is a very nice power supply (0-18V, 4.5A max.). There's a nice Kikusui on eBay right now - item 320485731691. Just a thought. *HP power supplies are also plentious. *I have an Astron RS-35M and are well pleased with it but I think for your purposes, it might be overkill. You could always build a nicely-regulated power supply as well. *It isn't hard to do... Barry - N4BUQ Thanks, Barry - have not heard of Kikusui before. Checked EBay, actually quite a few Kikusui items there. Fairly small current output it seems, but nice-looking equipment with a fair amount of hands-on control. I think I'd need a manual. As far as building one goes, I tend to be a very frightened tinkerer. I have no reliable test equipment per se, save for a couple of simple analogue VOMs, and relatively poor soldering skills. I know, I'm in the wrong hobby - but I just like listening to radio, and I'm pretty happy to let others do most of the building :-) I do like messing with antennas, though... Bruce |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
bpnjensen wrote:
On Feb 11, 6:59 am, dave wrote: bpnjensen wrote: Hi, folks - If you please, I am looking for recommendations for a PS that will provide the usual 12 or 13.8v, about 5 - 7 amps be plenty. Love to get rid of the myriad 500 ma wall-warts. I'd rather not have it be too expensive, but it would be nice if it didn't send spikes, blow up or cause hash or electrical hum. Any thoughts? There is a plethora of manufacturers and models, reviews are all over the place, I have no idea which ones are OK. Pyramid makes a 5-amp job that would be great, if it's any good. I also see Radio Shack PSs at about twice that current. Would a switching PS be better? Thanks in advance ~ Bruce Jensen I use an Astron switch mode supply. It makes no noise. It makes no heat. Linear supplies waste electricity. No hash or other electrical noise artifacts? None that I've noticed. These are specifically sold for Amateur Radio. From what I've heard the Astrons and the MFJs are both electrically quiet. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 11, 12:15*am, bpnjensen wrote:
On Feb 10, 8:55*pm, wrote: On Feb 10, 10:56*pm, "D. Peter Maus" wrote: On 2/10/10 21:34 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 3:08 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 16:41 , dxAce wrote: "D. Peter Maus" wrote: * * *I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. * * May be where I got the idea. * * It's a great PS. You could probably power a dozen R7s with 20 amps!. *I'm shooting for the Astron 7 amp job - that should tide me over. * *In boating...they call it *'2 foot-itis.' In audio we call it a '4-track fix.' * *No matter how bit a boat you have, you find it's just about 2 foot shy of what you need for a really good party. No matter how many channels you have, you find you need 4 more channels for the right mix. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
Thanks, Barry - have not heard of Kikusui before. Checked EBay,
actually quite a few Kikusui items there. Fairly small current output it seems, but nice-looking equipment with a fair amount of hands-on control. I think I'd need a manual. As far as building one goes, I tend to be a very frightened tinkerer. I have no reliable test equipment per se, save for a couple of simple analogue VOMs, and relatively poor soldering skills. I know, I'm in the wrong hobby - but I just like listening to radio, and I'm pretty happy to let others do most of the building :-) I do like messing with antennas, though... Bruce I had not heard of Kikusui before I got this one either, but I am impressed with it overall. It is built quite well. The lower-priced units don't supply a lot of current so you might be as well off with an Astron, etc. The one I got does 4.5A and I've never really needed that much for what I power it with. Good luck with it, Barry - N4BUQ |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 11, 5:15*pm, Gregg wrote:
On Feb 11, 12:15*am, bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 8:55*pm, wrote: On Feb 10, 10:56*pm, "D. Peter Maus" wrote: On 2/10/10 21:34 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 3:08 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 16:41 , dxAce wrote: "D. Peter Maus" wrote: * * *I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. * * May be where I got the idea. * * It's a great PS. You could probably power a dozen R7s with 20 amps!. *I'm shooting for the Astron 7 amp job - that should tide me over. * *In boating...they call it *'2 foot-itis.' In audio we call it a '4-track fix.' * *No matter how bit a boat you have, you find it's just about 2 foot shy of what you need for a really good party. No matter how many channels you have, you find you need 4 more channels for the right mix. * *If you're figuring 7 amps, within a year, you'll be looking for 2 more amps. * *Think future growth.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - * * * * * * * * * * Absolutely! I always expect to have a safe operating environment, and a bigger power supply is a must, not an overkill. In industrial installations, which run around the clock, p.s. are mandatory to be much heftier than what seems necessary to handle the usual load, so nothing terrible could possibly occur in the worth case scenario. At home I played with 12V gell cells for awhile, and was planning to acquire a deep discharge cycle battery from Sears, eventually. *By the way Pyramid's p.s.current rating cannot be trusted.The 7 amp claim to supply a constant *current is just not possible at all. Their ratings (and of many,many other brands) are based upon intermittent(!) use only. Actually, building a decent medium size (10 -15 Amp) regulated linear p.s. is not that difficult and parts are widely available from discarded electronics. P.S. * Switching p.s. should be avoided by all means,if possible. Just look how much RF the new florescent bulbs are causing lately. Thanks Peter and Arthur - right now and foreseeably, my total demand at maximum is probably 3 amps. *One main radio (Icom R75 - maxes at about 1 amp), a MFJ-1026 (500 - 600 ma) and maybe one other small RX or dsp unit at a time (1 amp max). *All the other things I have do just great on 115 VAC. *This, after 4 decades of s-l-o-w collecting! I have no TX and do not intend to resurrect my ancient ham license, so that sort of larger drain will never happen. So, at 5 amps continuous on the unit I am thinking about, that will already give me another 100% of headroom to play with. *I know I'm a bit odd in this respect ;-), but I don't collect stuff to run simultaneously (My entire active shack at any one time fits on 3 square feet of tabletop). I could get a ~12 amp I guess, but that would be considerable overkill for anything I can foresee. *Not figuring on the Pyramid any more. You guys and some research *have pretty much talked me into Astron :-) Bruce- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Ha! This is a good thread. FWIW - I have two Pyramids. Gregg, How do you like them? Any reports one way or the other? |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 11, 5:02*pm, dave wrote:
bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 11, 6:59 am, dave wrote: bpnjensen wrote: Hi, folks - If you please, I am looking for recommendations for a PS that will provide the usual 12 or 13.8v, about 5 - 7 amps be plenty. Love to get rid of the myriad 500 ma wall-warts. *I'd rather not have it be too expensive, but it would be nice if it didn't send spikes, blow up or cause hash or electrical hum. *Any thoughts? *There is a plethora of manufacturers and models, reviews are all over the place, I have no idea which ones are OK. *Pyramid makes a 5-amp job that would be great, if it's any good. *I also see Radio Shack PSs at about twice that current. *Would a switching PS be better? Thanks in advance ~ Bruce Jensen I use an Astron switch mode supply. *It makes no noise. *It makes no heat. *Linear supplies waste electricity. No hash or other electrical noise artifacts? None that I've noticed. *These are specifically sold for Amateur Radio. * From what I've heard the Astrons and the MFJs are both electrically quiet. Thanks - interesting. I'll look into those too. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On 2/11/10 19:15 , Gregg wrote:
On Feb 11, 12:15 am, wrote: On Feb 10, 8:55 pm, wrote: On Feb 10, 10:56 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 21:34 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 3:08 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 16:41 , dxAce wrote: "D. Peter Maus" wrote: I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. May be where I got the idea. It's a great PS. You could probably power a dozen R7s with 20 amps!. I'm shooting for the Astron 7 amp job - that should tide me over. In boating...they call it '2 foot-itis.' In audio we call it a '4-track fix.' No matter how bit a boat you have, you find it's just about 2 foot shy of what you need for a really good party. No matter how many channels you have, you find you need 4 more channels for the right mix. If you're figuring 7 amps, within a year, you'll be looking for 2 more amps. Think future growth.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Absolutely! I always expect to have a safe operating environment, and a bigger power supply is a must, not an overkill. In industrial installations, which run around the clock, p.s. are mandatory to be much heftier than what seems necessary to handle the usual load, so nothing terrible could possibly occur in the worth case scenario. At home I played with 12V gell cells for awhile, and was planning to acquire a deep discharge cycle battery from Sears, eventually. By the way Pyramid's p.s.current rating cannot be trusted.The 7 amp claim to supply a constant current is just not possible at all. Their ratings (and of many,many other brands) are based upon intermittent(!) use only. Actually, building a decent medium size (10 -15 Amp) regulated linear p.s. is not that difficult and parts are widely available from discarded electronics. P.S. Switching p.s. should be avoided by all means,if possible. Just look how much RF the new florescent bulbs are causing lately. Thanks Peter and Arthur - right now and foreseeably, my total demand at maximum is probably 3 amps. One main radio (Icom R75 - maxes at about 1 amp), a MFJ-1026 (500 - 600 ma) and maybe one other small RX or dsp unit at a time (1 amp max). All the other things I have do just great on 115 VAC. This, after 4 decades of s-l-o-w collecting! I have no TX and do not intend to resurrect my ancient ham license, so that sort of larger drain will never happen. So, at 5 amps continuous on the unit I am thinking about, that will already give me another 100% of headroom to play with. I know I'm a bit odd in this respect ;-), but I don't collect stuff to run simultaneously (My entire active shack at any one time fits on 3 square feet of tabletop). I could get a ~12 amp I guess, but that would be considerable overkill for anything I can foresee. Not figuring on the Pyramid any more. You guys and some research have pretty much talked me into Astron :-) Bruce- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Ha! This is a good thread. Oh, well, then it will have to stop, at once. FWIW - I have two Pyramids. Which models? |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
bpnjensen wrote:
None that I've noticed. These are specifically sold for Amateur Radio. From what I've heard the Astrons and the MFJs are both electrically quiet. Thanks - interesting. I'll look into those too. Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 12, 5:16*am, dave wrote:
bpnjensen wrote: None that I've noticed. *These are specifically sold for Amateur Radio. * *From what I've heard the Astrons and the MFJs are both electrically quiet. Thanks - interesting. *I'll look into those too. Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On 2/12/10 10:13 , bpnjensen wrote:
Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. I did some research into the Pyramid supplies. As I said earlier, they were not built for continuous service. Apparently, at any load. Shame, too. With modification, they can be a pretty decent supply. Apparently Pyramid has been taking design tips for ICOM. :) |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 12, 8:29*am, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 2/12/10 10:13 , bpnjensen wrote: Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! *But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. * *I did some research into the Pyramid supplies. As I said earlier, they were not built for continuous service. Apparently, at any load. Shame, too. With modification, they can be a pretty decent supply. * *Apparently Pyramid has been taking design tips for ICOM. * *:) My Icom R75 has been working flawlessly for many years :-) |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
Bob Dobbs wrote: bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 12, 5:16 am, dave wrote: Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. Only a couple complaints w/Astrons: 1 - They seem to run hot (to the touch) in the summer, but an external fan alleviates that just fine. 2 - The internal light in the illuminated power switch is very touchy, sometimes failing to even come on after awhile. Otherwise Astrons are long lived hard working units, generally regarded as well worth their initial cost. That's why they are so commonly found in repeater vaults. If I recall correctly that's exactly where my RS-50M went, into a repeater vault. I used to use it when I was running 170 watts or so on 2 meters. dxAce Michigan USA |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 12, 8:16*am, dave wrote:
bpnjensen wrote: None that I've noticed. *These are specifically sold for Amateur Radio. * *From what I've heard the Astrons and the MFJs are both electrically quiet. Thanks - interesting. *I'll look into those too. Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 I would not use them unless it is supporting casually used gear, like small car stereos. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
bpnjensen wrote:
On Feb 12, 8:29 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/12/10 10:13 , bpnjensen wrote: Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. I did some research into the Pyramid supplies. As I said earlier, they were not built for continuous service. Apparently, at any load. Shame, too. With modification, they can be a pretty decent supply. Apparently Pyramid has been taking design tips for ICOM. :) My Icom R75 has been working flawlessly for many years :-) Mine runs constantly. I had it "restored" at ICOM USA a couple years back. They replaced something in the first mixer I think, (involved taking shielded circuitry apart-very messy). Today the radio serves as my 24/7 30 meter autospotter. www.pskreporter.info |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 13, 8:04*am, dave wrote:
bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 12, 8:29 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/12/10 10:13 , bpnjensen wrote: Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! *But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. * * I did some research into the Pyramid supplies. As I said earlier, they were not built for continuous service. Apparently, at any load. Shame, too. With modification, they can be a pretty decent supply. * * Apparently Pyramid has been taking design tips for ICOM. * * :) My Icom R75 has been working flawlessly for many years :-) Mine runs constantly. *I had it "restored" at ICOM USA a couple years back. *They replaced something in the first mixer I think, (involved taking shielded circuitry apart-very messy). *Today the radio serves as my 24/7 30 meter autospotter. www.pskreporter.info- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Icom is one of very few manufacturers left that are serious as far as RF design goes. R-75 was not their most sucessful, but it is worth the money. I believe it is still available at this time. It won't be produced for much longer. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 11, 10:50*pm, bpnjensen wrote:
On Feb 11, 5:15*pm, Gregg wrote: On Feb 11, 12:15*am, bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 8:55*pm, wrote: On Feb 10, 10:56*pm, "D. Peter Maus" wrote: On 2/10/10 21:34 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 10, 3:08 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/10/10 16:41 , dxAce wrote: "D. Peter Maus" wrote: * * *I replaced my wall warts in the radio room with an Astron VS-20M. Serious power. Serious regulation. Very clean power. Nice listening. I use an Astron RS-20M here to power the Drake R7. * * May be where I got the idea. * * It's a great PS. You could probably power a dozen R7s with 20 amps!. *I'm shooting for the Astron 7 amp job - that should tide me over. * *In boating...they call it *'2 foot-itis.' In audio we call it a '4-track fix.' * *No matter how bit a boat you have, you find it's just about 2 foot shy of what you need for a really good party. No matter how many channels you have, you find you need 4 more channels for the right mix. * *If you're figuring 7 amps, within a year, you'll be looking for 2 more amps. * *Think future growth.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - * * * * * * * * * * Absolutely! I always expect to have a safe operating environment, and a bigger power supply is a must, not an overkill. In industrial installations, which run around the clock, p.s. are mandatory to be much heftier than what seems necessary to handle the usual load, so nothing terrible could possibly occur in the worth case scenario. At home I played with 12V gell cells for awhile, and was planning to acquire a deep discharge cycle battery from Sears, eventually. *By the way Pyramid's p.s.current rating cannot be trusted.The 7 amp claim to supply a constant *current is just not possible at all. Their ratings (and of many,many other brands) are based upon intermittent(!) use only. Actually, building a decent medium size (10 -15 Amp) regulated linear p.s. is not that difficult and parts are widely available from discarded electronics. P.S. * Switching p.s. should be avoided by all means,if possible. Just look how much RF the new florescent bulbs are causing lately. Thanks Peter and Arthur - right now and foreseeably, my total demand at maximum is probably 3 amps. *One main radio (Icom R75 - maxes at about 1 amp), a MFJ-1026 (500 - 600 ma) and maybe one other small RX or dsp unit at a time (1 amp max). *All the other things I have do just great on 115 VAC. *This, after 4 decades of s-l-o-w collecting! I have no TX and do not intend to resurrect my ancient ham license, so that sort of larger drain will never happen. So, at 5 amps continuous on the unit I am thinking about, that will already give me another 100% of headroom to play with. *I know I'm a bit odd in this respect ;-), but I don't collect stuff to run simultaneously (My entire active shack at any one time fits on 3 square feet of tabletop). I could get a ~12 amp I guess, but that would be considerable overkill for anything I can foresee. *Not figuring on the Pyramid any more. You guys and some research *have pretty much talked me into Astron :-) Bruce- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Ha! This is a good thread. FWIW - I have two Pyramids. Gregg, How do you like them? *Any reports one way or the other?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Actually Bruce, I have only put into service one of them. I know I plugged in the one I have in the closet just to see if it worked, but that is where she has set for eight to ten yrs. more than likely. The other one I have used quite a lot and after reading this thread I think I'll look into running it with some of my receivers. Maybe someone more astute can tell me about the ps I have and what was "told" to me. I don't know enough to call bull**** on it - but I got them from a former ham friend. They both are the "Pyramid - Model #PS-9KX" He told me that he modified both with a slightly bigger fan and could "do" more than it says. Is that possible? I know it's a pretty heavy piece for its size. I did transmit off it for a couple of years on the CB. When I would key up and talk into my Turner - the lighted red switch never gave a hint of dimming. {?} It reads on the front: Input:115V AC 60Hz 70W Output: 13.8V DC 5 AMP Constant 7 AMP Surge But yeah Bruce, at least as far as my experience with the one - I never had a problem with it and it has (from me at least) to have a couple thousand hours on it. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 12, 11:29*am, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 2/12/10 10:13 , bpnjensen wrote: Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! *But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. * *I did some research into the Pyramid supplies. As I said earlier, they were not built for continuous service. Apparently, at any load. Shame, too. With modification, they can be a pretty decent supply. * *Apparently Pyramid has been taking design tips for ICOM. * *:) Ah Ha then, maybe dear old former friend wasn't lying then about modding them. He was always modding something when I was over at the shop. He sure wanted them back pretty bad. Tough. :-I |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On 2/14/10 07:11 , Gregg wrote:
On Feb 12, 11:29 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/12/10 10:13 , bpnjensen wrote: Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. I did some research into the Pyramid supplies. As I said earlier, they were not built for continuous service. Apparently, at any load. Shame, too. With modification, they can be a pretty decent supply. Apparently Pyramid has been taking design tips for ICOM. :) Ah Ha then, maybe dear old former friend wasn't lying then about modding them. He was always modding something when I was over at the shop. He sure wanted them back pretty bad. Tough. :-I They're nice supplies. And as you pointed out, you DID work CB off of one for a couple of years without issue. But that was intermittent service, which is what most of these supplies are built for. Most any supply will work for most applications. It's continuous draw that does them in. But that's not a surprise. ICOM's, like R71, R7000, R7100 are renowned for running so damned hot that the back panel can be too hot to touch. Even the factory recommends going in periodically and touching up solder joints, checking components for heat damage. And ICOM"s not the only one. But that doesn't mean it's not poor design. Which CB rig were you running, and what type of antenna did you use? |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 13, 10:40*pm, wrote:
On Feb 13, 8:04*am, dave wrote: bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 12, 8:29 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/12/10 10:13 , bpnjensen wrote: Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! *But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. * * I did some research into the Pyramid supplies. As I said earlier, they were not built for continuous service. Apparently, at any load. Shame, too. With modification, they can be a pretty decent supply. * * Apparently Pyramid has been taking design tips for ICOM. * * :) My Icom R75 has been working flawlessly for many years :-) Mine runs constantly. *I had it "restored" at ICOM USA a couple years back. *They replaced something in the first mixer I think, (involved taking shielded circuitry apart-very messy). *Today the radio serves as my 24/7 30 meter autospotter. www.pskreporter.info-Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - * *Icom is one of very few manufacturers left that are serious as far as RF design goes. R-75 was not their most sucessful, but it is worth the money. I believe it is still available at this time. It won't be produced for much longer. Actually, the only problem with it was the S-AM, which was largely (if not perfectly) rectified by the Kiwa mods. Otherwise it is a remarkable performer, and for the general price (even modified) I think it is hard to beat by any other unit past or present. The only things standing between me and the most ridiculously weak signals are my antennas and propagation (and local RFI, of course). I'd buy one again, no hesitation. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 14, 7:15*am, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 2/14/10 07:11 , Gregg wrote: On Feb 12, 11:29 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/12/10 10:13 , bpnjensen wrote: Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! *But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. * * I did some research into the Pyramid supplies. As I said earlier, they were not built for continuous service. Apparently, at any load. Shame, too. With modification, they can be a pretty decent supply. * * Apparently Pyramid has been taking design tips for ICOM. * * :) Ah Ha then, maybe dear old former friend wasn't lying then about modding them. He was always modding something when I was over at the shop. *He sure wanted them back pretty bad. Tough. :-I * *They're nice supplies. And as you pointed out, you DID work CB off of one for a couple of years without issue. But that was intermittent service, which is what most of these supplies are built for. * *Most any supply will work for most applications. It's continuous draw that does them in. But that's not a surprise. ICOM's, like R71, R7000, R7100 are renowned for running so damned hot that the back panel can be too hot to touch. Even the factory recommends going in periodically and touching up solder joints, checking components for heat damage. * *And ICOM"s not the only one. But that doesn't mean it's not poor design. * *Which CB rig were you running, and what type of antenna did you use? Peter - Shouldn't a 5 amp output supply be fully adequate to support a CB, even SSB, that would require a draw of maybe 2 amp at transmit? It is true, the Icoms run hot - specifically with the R75, it is likely the power brick, which supplies almost 50% more voltage to the unit that it requires (near 18 volts). Another reason why I want the external PS. Bruce |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On 2/14/10 12:15 , bpnjensen wrote:
On Feb 14, 7:15 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/14/10 07:11 , Gregg wrote: On Feb 12, 11:29 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/12/10 10:13 , bpnjensen wrote: Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. I did some research into the Pyramid supplies. As I said earlier, they were not built for continuous service. Apparently, at any load. Shame, too. With modification, they can be a pretty decent supply. Apparently Pyramid has been taking design tips for ICOM. :) Ah Ha then, maybe dear old former friend wasn't lying then about modding them. He was always modding something when I was over at the shop. He sure wanted them back pretty bad. Tough. :-I They're nice supplies. And as you pointed out, you DID work CB off of one for a couple of years without issue. But that was intermittent service, which is what most of these supplies are built for. Most any supply will work for most applications. It's continuous draw that does them in. But that's not a surprise. ICOM's, like R71, R7000, R7100 are renowned for running so damned hot that the back panel can be too hot to touch. Even the factory recommends going in periodically and touching up solder joints, checking components for heat damage. And ICOM"s not the only one. But that doesn't mean it's not poor design. Which CB rig were you running, and what type of antenna did you use? Peter - Shouldn't a 5 amp output supply be fully adequate to support a CB, even SSB, that would require a draw of maybe 2 amp at transmit? That's the point....How is that 5 amps measured? If the 5 amps was measured to be steady for, say 5 minutes, that's considered continuous service. In the case of 2 way radio, 'continuous' may be also considered anything that is not 'peak.' The point then becomes 'how does the manufacturer define their terms Peak and Continuous?' And how do they measure these services. If the power supply is rated at 5 amps continuous, one may safely assume that 2 amp draw will be no problem. HOWEVER, how is that 5 amp service measured? 5 minutes? 10 minutes? Or do they run the supply until the components reach constant temperature and then rate THEN measure the continous output for a week? Probably not. Most of the time, the supply is built for intermittent service as found in 2 way radio service. Short bursts, a minute or more, of sustained current at rated output. In this case, 5 amps. And the supply does it handily. But the components never reach constant temperature. That same power supply may, if run at 2 amps, reach constant temperature, and the components may not survive that temperature if run continously, ongoing. Read the user reviews at eHam of supplies that have burned up resistors, even though used within their defined ratings. Consider. You can take a CB radio out of the box, hook it up and converse for an entire 1500 mile trip without difficult. The components are taking the full rated output--peak and continuous--of the transmission for the entire trip. In bursts of conversation, sometimes a minute, two minutes at a time. But that's intermittent service. Tape that key down and let it transmit indefinitely. It will fail. And pretty quickly. The components were rated sufficiently for peak current during voice peaks, and continous current during a conversational segment, but not for continous broadcast. Neither the power input regulators, not the finals will take a full load indefinitely. Even though current can be many times average. Even though the power throughput never exceeds rating. The radio used for conversation will be trouble free for years. Used as a broadcast device, it will fail quickly. Pirates like to use Ham rigs for their broadcasts. These have to be modified for the duration of a broadcast to meet the extremes of continous ongoing service. Even rigs built with conservatively rated, quality components will not be able to meet the demand of continous ongoing service. Though the same rigs will be in use all day, every day for 2 way conversation without issue. It all depends on HOW the power supply ratings are determined. Very few are tested with continous ongoing service in mind. Because that's not what they're purchased for. So, that 5 amp rating may be illusory. And though 2 amps may seem logically assumed to be a safe, and troublefree, output for a 5 amp supply, if the components were selected with intermittent service in mind, they may find that 2 amps takes them more slowly to constant temperature, but they do reach constant temperature, where they sit and cook until they fail because they're not sufficiently cooled. And because the supply is built with intermittent service in mind, component cooling is less of a priority, and not a design consideration beyond the minimums. That's why when selecting a power supply, current ratings are usually meaningless unless you know how they were determined. Assumptions may be made, but you have to know what assumptions the manufacturer was making as well when the device was designed. Read the eHam reviews of some of these supplies. Failure after a short time at current draws well within the performance curve. It is true, the Icoms run hot - specifically with the R75, it is likely the power brick, which supplies almost 50% more voltage to the unit that it requires (near 18 volts). The regulator, and the load draw down of the supply, itself, brings down that voltage. The heat is generated by the regulator, but generates so much heat that nearby resistors burn because they can't cool themselves. The voltage input to the regulator is higher than the operating voltage at the output of the regulator so that there is something to actually regulate. It's this extra power that's dissipated as heat by the regulator. If there's a voltage sag due to peak draw, or lower input voltage, there's some play for the regulator to work with. And the brick, itself is a 'just enough' supply...providing sufficient current for the operation of the radio, with a modest reserve so when all functions are active, and volume is high, audio peaks don't draw more than the radio can access, and modulate the supply rail. But the very load of the radio itself will draw down the voltage of the brick in operation. Measure the voltage of the brick open circuit. 18 v. Now measure the voltage output while the radio is in operation....the voltage will be lower. Closer to 14. This PS is designed with this occurence in mind, and it's normal. A bigger supply with a 12-13.8 voltage input to your radio will provide the same current as the brick, and the radio will get just as hot. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 14, 11:29*am, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 2/14/10 12:15 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 14, 7:15 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/14/10 07:11 , Gregg wrote: On Feb 12, 11:29 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/12/10 10:13 , bpnjensen wrote: Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! *But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. * * *I did some research into the Pyramid supplies. As I said earlier, they were not built for continuous service. Apparently, at any load. Shame, too. With modification, they can be a pretty decent supply. * * *Apparently Pyramid has been taking design tips for ICOM. * * *:) Ah Ha then, maybe dear old former friend wasn't lying then about modding them. He was always modding something when I was over at the shop. *He sure wanted them back pretty bad. Tough. :-I * * They're nice supplies. And as you pointed out, you DID work CB off of one for a couple of years without issue. But that was intermittent service, which is what most of these supplies are built for. * * Most any supply will work for most applications. It's continuous draw that does them in. But that's not a surprise. ICOM's, like R71, R7000, R7100 are renowned for running so damned hot that the back panel can be too hot to touch. Even the factory recommends going in periodically and touching up solder joints, checking components for heat damage. * * And ICOM"s not the only one. But that doesn't mean it's not poor design. * * Which CB rig were you running, and what type of antenna did you use? Peter - Shouldn't a 5 amp output supply be fully adequate to support a CB, even SSB, that would require a draw of maybe 2 amp at transmit? * *That's the point....How is that 5 amps measured? If the 5 amps was measured to be steady for, say 5 minutes, that's considered continuous service. In the case of 2 way radio, 'continuous' may be also considered anything that is not 'peak.' * *The point then becomes 'how does the manufacturer define their terms Peak and Continuous?' And how do they measure these services. * *If the power supply is rated at 5 amps continuous, one may safely assume that 2 amp draw will be no problem. HOWEVER, how is that 5 amp service measured? 5 minutes? 10 minutes? Or do they run the supply until the components reach constant temperature and then rate THEN measure the continous output for a week? * *Probably not. * *Most of the time, the supply is built for intermittent service as found in 2 way radio service. Short bursts, a minute or more, of sustained current at rated output. In this case, 5 amps. And the supply does it handily. But the components never reach constant temperature. * *That same power supply may, if run at 2 amps, reach constant temperature, and the components may not survive that temperature if run continously, ongoing. Read the user reviews at eHam of supplies that have burned up resistors, even though used within their defined ratings. * *Consider. You can take a CB radio out of the box, hook it up and converse for an entire 1500 mile trip without difficult. The components are taking the full rated output--peak and continuous--of the transmission for the entire trip. In bursts of conversation, sometimes a minute, two minutes at a time. * *But that's intermittent service. Tape that key down and let it transmit indefinitely. It will fail. And pretty quickly. The components were rated sufficiently for peak current during voice peaks, and continous current during a conversational segment, but not for continous broadcast. Neither the power input regulators, not the finals will take a full load indefinitely. Even though current can be many times average. Even though the power throughput never exceeds rating. * *The radio used for conversation will be trouble free for years. Used as a broadcast device, it will fail quickly. * *Pirates like to use Ham rigs for their broadcasts. These have to be modified for the duration of a broadcast to meet the extremes of continous ongoing service. Even rigs built with conservatively rated, quality components will not be able to meet the demand of continous ongoing service. Though the same rigs will be in use all day, every day for 2 way conversation without issue. * *It all depends on HOW the power supply ratings are determined. Very few are tested with continous ongoing service in mind. Because that's not what they're purchased for. * *So, that 5 amp rating may be illusory. And though 2 amps may seem logically assumed to be a safe, and troublefree, output for a 5 amp supply, if the components were selected with intermittent service in mind, they may find that 2 amps takes them more slowly to constant temperature, but they do reach constant temperature, where they sit and cook until they fail because they're not sufficiently cooled. And because the supply is built with intermittent service in mind, component cooling is less of a priority, and not a design consideration beyond the minimums. * *That's why when selecting a power supply, current ratings are usually meaningless unless you know how they were determined. Assumptions may be made, but you have to know what assumptions the manufacturer was making as well when the device was designed. * *Read the eHam reviews of some of these supplies. Failure after a short time at current draws well within the performance curve. It is true, the Icoms run hot - specifically with the R75, it is likely the power brick, which supplies almost 50% more voltage to the unit that it requires (near 18 volts). * *The regulator, and the load draw down of the supply, itself, brings down that voltage. The heat is generated by the regulator, but generates so much heat that nearby resistors burn because they can't cool themselves. * *The voltage input to the regulator is higher than the operating voltage at the output of the regulator so that there is something to actually regulate. It's this extra power that's dissipated as heat by the regulator. If there's a voltage sag due to peak draw, or lower input voltage, there's some play for the regulator to work with. * *And the brick, itself is a 'just enough' supply...providing sufficient current for the operation of the radio, with a modest reserve so when all functions are active, and volume is high, audio peaks don't draw more than the radio can access, and modulate the supply rail. *But the very load of the radio itself will draw down the voltage of the brick in operation. * *Measure the voltage of the brick open circuit. 18 v. Now measure the voltage output while the radio is in operation....the voltage will be lower. Closer to 14. This PS is designed with this occurence in mind, and it's normal. A bigger supply with a 12-13.8 voltage input to your radio will provide the same current as the brick, and the radio will get just as hot.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hmmm - all good points. Thanks, Peter. |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
On Feb 14, 11:29*am, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 2/14/10 12:15 , bpnjensen wrote: On Feb 14, 7:15 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/14/10 07:11 , Gregg wrote: On Feb 12, 11:29 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 2/12/10 10:13 , bpnjensen wrote: Pyramids are not especially popular with the Amateur Radio crowd: http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/20 So I have noticed! *But the Astrons, in general, have a loyal following. * * *I did some research into the Pyramid supplies. As I said earlier, they were not built for continuous service. Apparently, at any load. Shame, too. With modification, they can be a pretty decent supply. * * *Apparently Pyramid has been taking design tips for ICOM. * * *:) Ah Ha then, maybe dear old former friend wasn't lying then about modding them. He was always modding something when I was over at the shop. *He sure wanted them back pretty bad. Tough. :-I * * They're nice supplies. And as you pointed out, you DID work CB off of one for a couple of years without issue. But that was intermittent service, which is what most of these supplies are built for. * * Most any supply will work for most applications. It's continuous draw that does them in. But that's not a surprise. ICOM's, like R71, R7000, R7100 are renowned for running so damned hot that the back panel can be too hot to touch. Even the factory recommends going in periodically and touching up solder joints, checking components for heat damage. * * And ICOM"s not the only one. But that doesn't mean it's not poor design. * * Which CB rig were you running, and what type of antenna did you use? Peter - Shouldn't a 5 amp output supply be fully adequate to support a CB, even SSB, that would require a draw of maybe 2 amp at transmit? * *That's the point....How is that 5 amps measured? If the 5 amps was measured to be steady for, say 5 minutes, that's considered continuous service. In the case of 2 way radio, 'continuous' may be also considered anything that is not 'peak.' * *The point then becomes 'how does the manufacturer define their terms Peak and Continuous?' And how do they measure these services. * *If the power supply is rated at 5 amps continuous, one may safely assume that 2 amp draw will be no problem. HOWEVER, how is that 5 amp service measured? 5 minutes? 10 minutes? Or do they run the supply until the components reach constant temperature and then rate THEN measure the continous output for a week? * *Probably not. * *Most of the time, the supply is built for intermittent service as found in 2 way radio service. Short bursts, a minute or more, of sustained current at rated output. In this case, 5 amps. And the supply does it handily. But the components never reach constant temperature. * *That same power supply may, if run at 2 amps, reach constant temperature, and the components may not survive that temperature if run continously, ongoing. Read the user reviews at eHam of supplies that have burned up resistors, even though used within their defined ratings. * *Consider. You can take a CB radio out of the box, hook it up and converse for an entire 1500 mile trip without difficult. The components are taking the full rated output--peak and continuous--of the transmission for the entire trip. In bursts of conversation, sometimes a minute, two minutes at a time. * *But that's intermittent service. Tape that key down and let it transmit indefinitely. It will fail. And pretty quickly. The components were rated sufficiently for peak current during voice peaks, and continous current during a conversational segment, but not for continous broadcast. Neither the power input regulators, not the finals will take a full load indefinitely. Even though current can be many times average. Even though the power throughput never exceeds rating. * *The radio used for conversation will be trouble free for years. Used as a broadcast device, it will fail quickly. * *Pirates like to use Ham rigs for their broadcasts. These have to be modified for the duration of a broadcast to meet the extremes of continous ongoing service. Even rigs built with conservatively rated, quality components will not be able to meet the demand of continous ongoing service. Though the same rigs will be in use all day, every day for 2 way conversation without issue. * *It all depends on HOW the power supply ratings are determined. Very few are tested with continous ongoing service in mind. Because that's not what they're purchased for. * *So, that 5 amp rating may be illusory. And though 2 amps may seem logically assumed to be a safe, and troublefree, output for a 5 amp supply, if the components were selected with intermittent service in mind, they may find that 2 amps takes them more slowly to constant temperature, but they do reach constant temperature, where they sit and cook until they fail because they're not sufficiently cooled. And because the supply is built with intermittent service in mind, component cooling is less of a priority, and not a design consideration beyond the minimums. * *That's why when selecting a power supply, current ratings are usually meaningless unless you know how they were determined. Assumptions may be made, but you have to know what assumptions the manufacturer was making as well when the device was designed. * *Read the eHam reviews of some of these supplies. Failure after a short time at current draws well within the performance curve. On the Astron supplies, near as I can tell, the high rating (the amp value implicitly included in the model number) is the 50% duty value, which I assume is what it can more or less safely handle if you switch evenly between a high draw (such as during transmit) and a lower value during receive. The lower value Astron lists, which is typically about 20-25% below the top value, is what the company claims is the continuous amount it can safely provide continually. Is it safe, then, to assume that a combination of draws that total somewhat less than the lower rating would not put undue stress on the supply? (FWIW, I'm still thinking the Astron 7/5 amp supply for my ~ 2.5 amp max needs, or if I feel unsure, the Astron 12/9). Might even throw a muffin fan on the back. Gentlemen, thanks for all your great help! Bruce |
Recommendations - 12 / 13.8v Power Supply, ~ 5 amp?
bpnjensen wrote:
Is it safe, then, to assume that a combination of draws that total somewhat less than the lower rating would not put undue stress on the supply? (FWIW, I'm still thinking the Astron 7/5 amp supply for my ~ 2.5 amp max needs, or if I feel unsure, the Astron 12/9). Might even throw a muffin fan on the back. Gentlemen, thanks for all your great help! Bruce I run a 12 Watt radio (K3/10), my LDG Z-100 tuner, and a 45 Watt amp (Tokyo Hy-Power HL45B) on an Astron SS-12. The thing never even gets warm. |
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