VHF in waterside workshop - Can someone suggest a mains power supply unit

I use any old tranny, off a keyboard or some such, but only for listening. My boat ammeter used to show 7A on transmit.
When I did transmit from shore I pretended to be a vessel, made up name, or used one I owned. So don't use 'Boatyard base' for instance
Amps x Volts means you used 29 plus Watts -

Not far from the 25w standard that most radios state as their output.
 
Be careful powering it from a 12v supply. Most mobile gear is designed for operation on 13.8v.

25 watts at 13.8v is less than 2A but the transmitter is not 100% efficient plus all the other electronics in the box means 5A should be good and indeed this is what the Icom etc spec shows as drain.

As others have said, check the legality of a shore installation.

Another contender .. https://cpc.farnell.com/unbranded/in06977/power-supply-bench-13-8v-6a/dp/IN06977

???? VHF is designed to run on the range of voltage found on boats ... that's literally 11v up to 14.8v ..... basically the range your on-board batterys go through and while charging from alternator ...

The only item that then is of concern - the lower voltage will incurr higher amps to maintain the Tx power ... and is why I advocate a 12v 5A PSU ....
 
???? VHF is designed to run on the range of voltage found on boats ... that's literally 11v up to 14.8v ..... basically the range your on-board batterys go through and while charging from alternator ...

The only item that then is of concern - the lower voltage will incurr higher amps to maintain the Tx power ... and is why I advocate a 12v 5A PSU ....

Which is exactly why I suggest running it on the correct voltage. Most components are rated by current so running them hotter/higher/faster will only shorten their life.

Something like this in link below will give a suitable smoothed output.


Amazon.co.uk

My third link in the post above yours has this item (Nevada PS08) available direct from Nevada for £10 less than the Amazon link you provided. For info in case the OP chooses to go down this route.

Nevada PS-08 - Waters & Stanton
 
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Drop OfCom an email or lift the telephone and speak to them.
As one cynical Scot to another. Quite right! The usual load of verbal diarrhoea, or should I say literary, Any power supply as mentioned by Refueler will do, forget the fancy expensive gubbins which is totally unnecessary. The important thing is to stay within the law and get the correct radio and licence!!
 
As one cynical Scot to another. Quite right! The usual load of verbal diarrhoea, or should I say literary, Any power supply as mentioned by Refueler will do, forget the fancy expensive gubbins which is totally unnecessary. The important thing is to stay within the law and get the correct radio and licence!!
I don't agree a cheap Chinese PSU intended for something else will do since it will be a very noisy output, both the DC and RFI emissions from the unit. I've watched enough Big Clive on You Tube not to trust any Chinese PSU in my house other than those that came through Apple/Samsung etc QC.

My background is as a radio amateur since age 14, a Marconi radio comms apprenticeship, 20 years in the audio industry etc. Big believer in "you get what you pay for". Including advice on internet forums is worth the amount the poster paid for it :)
 
I don't agree a cheap Chinese PSU intended for something else will do since it will be a very noisy output, both the DC and RFI emissions from the unit. I've watched enough Big Clive on You Tube not to trust any Chinese PSU in my house other than those that came through Apple/Samsung etc QC.

My background is as a radio amateur since age 14, a Marconi radio comms apprenticeship, 20 years in the audio industry etc. Big believer in "you get what you pay for". Including advice on internet forums is worth the amount the poster paid for it :)
Between those Chinese Wall Wart PSUs and the powerline ethernet they totally overpowered the receive side of my Yaesu FT895, S9+ could hear nothing at all, now banned any form of powerline internet in the house.

Started out as a Radar Tech for Decca, then an engineer in a recording studio and been a radio amateur since 1980.
 
Any half decent 240V 10A PSU with stablised output will power a marine radio all day long.
Anything designed for amateur radio would be ideal.
1W would probably be enough to do most short range communications.
Connect to budget VHF aerial, the height would depend on just how far you need to communicate.
If you want to do it properly OFCOM will allocate you a private channel and then charge you handsomely on each renewal, condition of the licence is your base equipment must be type approved for base use .

The frequency will need to be programmed into your equipment usually only available to dealers.
Those 466 radios are great if you can see the other radio user at the end of the garden and also want to share your private conversations with anybody and everybody within range.
Old enough to remember ordering Xtals for marine radio.
 
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I don't agree a cheap Chinese PSU intended for something else will do since it will be a very noisy output, both the DC and RFI emissions from the unit. I've watched enough Big Clive on You Tube not to trust any Chinese PSU in my house other than those that came through Apple/Samsung etc QC.

My background is as a radio amateur since age 14, a Marconi radio comms apprenticeship, 20 years in the audio industry etc. Big believer in "you get what you pay for". Including advice on internet forums is worth the amount the poster paid for it :)

Well ... you should know !!!

Trouble is I have a bank of such Chinese PSU's powering many delicate and sensitive items ... radios, Lithium Chargers, remote cameras, loads of gear that TBH outguns a boat VHF !!

I suggest to you that vast majority of PSU's whether internal or external are produced in China ... regardless of brand label.

I have a couple of HP Computer power banks ... capable of 1300W each ... guess what ... Chinese !!
 
I would like to fit a fixed Standard or ICOM fixed VHF in a waterside workshop to communicate with our boat and would like to connect it to a 240volt supply. Can anyone recommend a good quality unit (ie not a cheap unbranded version) that would provide a 12 volt DC output at the required amps from an AC mains point?

Many thanks
In the boat I have a 240-12 v transformer - try Surom12v 30a Dc on Amazon- cost about £22. In the Workshop I use a variable voltage transformer - try searching R-SPS3010- gives more options on voltage and amperage- price £40-60 depending on exactly what you want.
 
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