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American made 12v DC power supply

lawrence1200

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Mar 13, 2022
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Can anyone recommend an American made 12v DC variable power supply? I want to use it to test car stereo equipment.
 
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nadogail

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The name may still be active but the company that made those movie projectors has faded into distant memory.

I have seen the name used to market imported flashlights.
 

Stuart in MN

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Citation

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Jan 20, 2016
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Ebay and some of the old HP rack mount power supplies might work. Most aren't going to have the power output the OP wants but some like this one may (no affiliation with the sellers)
Note: ^this one^ is over seas. Keep that in mind if you decide to bid... I wouldn't buy it because of that.

These old rack power supplies are really nice in that you can simply set the requested voltage and it's *very* accurate. I think with most you can also use them as a current supply (ie within the voltage range it will provide X amps of current and adjust the voltage as needed). Another nice feature is you can set both voltage and current limits. So even though this one can deliver 500W, you can limit the current to just a few mA if wanted. It is worth noting that these supplies are very big. They are a standard rack width but around 2' deep.
 

BillK

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I will second Astron. They are very popular in Amateur radio. I have three of them and they are pretty bullet proof. Ham Radio Outlet carries them:
 

tlmartin84

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Apr 23, 2012
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Location
West Virginia
Did anyone find anything?

I used this, and after a few times, it blew something in the board (I can't find the culprit).

1765302336206.png

I never had the stereo wide open, continuous power draw is only 55amps. But apparently the inrush on the capacitors is more than this could handle. (I didn't have the stereo on, amp wasn't on)
 

dcg9381

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Jun 20, 2018
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Austin, TX
One "cheat" is to use a PC power supply (mentioned above). 750+ watts and 12V for CPU and GPU. Pretty cheap.
If I was testing "big amp" things at 12v, I'd buffer through a battery.
 

ozyborn

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Apr 26, 2011
Messages
687
Phoenix Contact makes several great 12v power supplies. Outstanding warranty. We use them in security panels for Honeywell boards.
 

PCustoms

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Jul 23, 2011
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Location
VT
Thread was bumped yesterday with a relevant follow-up:

Did anyone find anything?

I used this, and after a few times, it blew something in the board (I can't find the culprit).

1765302336206.png

I never had the stereo wide open, continuous power draw is only 55amps. But apparently the inrush on the capacitors is more than this could handle. (I didn't have the stereo on, amp wasn't on)

But for some reason they couldn't be bothered to read this, just 2 posts above theirs:

I will second Astron. They are very popular in Amateur radio. I have three of them and they are pretty bullet proof. Ham Radio Outlet carries them:
 

tlmartin84

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Apr 23, 2012
Messages
1,085
Location
West Virginia
Thread was bumped yesterday with a relevant follow-up:



But for some reason they couldn't be bothered to read this, just 2 posts above theirs:
Nope, read it and went and checked them out. That's one brand, and extremely pricey. I guess you just like to look for an argument.
 

tlmartin84

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Apr 23, 2012
Messages
1,085
Location
West Virginia
One "cheat" is to use a PC power supply (mentioned above). 750+ watts and 12V for CPU and GPU. Pretty cheap.
If I was testing "big amp" things at 12v, I'd buffer through a battery.
I think this is what I am going to have to do for the amplifier and just disconnect it when testing the rest of the system. Just ***** having to lug a battery around.
 
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