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![]() "chuck" wrote in message ... i notice that my receiver gets very warm just being plugged in and not turned on is this normal? Yes, that is heat from the transformer, supply circuits and the display drivers. would running it on a dc power supply make it run cooler and possibly less static or noise from the mains supply? An external supply will move much of the heat generation out of the radio so it will run cooler. However, there may be no technical need to do so. If the external supply is quieter or has better filtering of line noise it may help. Other factors may mask any benefits. If your noise is dominated by noise coming in the antenna, a different power supply may not help. If the dominant noise is coming from the mains, then a noise filtering outlet strip may help. You have to look at yoour entire system to determine where money is best spent. to run it on dc would a computer power supply work??? No, that would be a bad choice. PC supplies are well regulated on 5 and 3.3 volt outputs but may have no regulation on the 12 volt outputs. They are also switching supplies and can generate a lot of noise. They also do not work well, perhap at all, without a proper load on the lower voltage outputs. if not could someone suggest a power supply that would work? Look in the radio's manual for the supply requirements. ( 11-16 volts at 2 amps ) Look for a regulated supply that is rated for a voltage in the required range and one that can supply 3-4 amps. You don't want to buy a supply rated at 2 amps as that means it may be running near 100% capacity and may have poorer regulation and a shorter life. More amps (higher current) is not a problem as long as the radio provides the supply's stated minimum load. Insufficient load can mean poor regulation. Personally, I use a Tripplite PR-3/UL supply for my R-8B. Did I do this for heat? No. Did I do it because the internal supply had noise? No. I did it because the accessory that sits on top of the Drake did work better with an external supply. Since I had the supply anyway, I also connected it to the reciever. I also needed one less 110V outlet as a result. thanks charles foster Ham radio suppliers will have supplies for radios. Usually they will have something for transmitters that can supply many amps. They generally have some suitable for receivers. However the radio has vents for heat dissipation and a lot of surface area to dissipate heat. As long as you don't cover the radio and block the airflow around it you shouldn't have problems even if it is a bit warm. (Or a lot warm as this radio tends to be.) craigm |
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