The price was right, from Redman Cb Inc. Shipping was very fast, and the delivery date was revised to 4 days earlier than scheduled, I guess that would be an advertising ploy from UPS. A nice touch with a 3 day holiday coming up.
First impression was, this sucker is heavy, 29 pounds. I got it out of the box and right away looked for any damages. The box was OK, it had an outer box with fiberglass strapping on it, then an inner box for the PS. Both were in good condition. But, by the outerbox, which came from China to some warehouse here, told the story, it had never been opened since leaving the factory. The PS itself was very well protected with big high density foam inserts holding the PS away from any box damage.
So looking around the power supply itself, it is nice and solid, a full metal jacket, good feet on it. The Cons were that the Voltage meter was in the hole but loose. [You can see the glue where I glued it in tight.] I could get a finger nail under one side and pull it out a bit, but not all the way. The Amp meter was nice and tight. The meters are not lighted. The AC cord is cheap plastic covered wires, nothing in the quality neighborhood of say a computer cord and no third prong ground nor wide prong for polarity.
On the front are two posts for + and - connection. I might have preferred they were in the back. These are hollow posts and the screw caps do come off to use either a spade tip or a full circle tip connector. I happened to have a set of jumpers in my electronics drawer with expanding tips that also just happened to fit into the hollow posts, so I cut these in half and soldered and heat shrinked the red and blacks of the amp together for a solid connection.
Also on the front and the main reason I bought this model is a dial to adjust voltage. This is a big plus for me. At present I am using a RM KL 200-P amp, that I wanted to feed with more than the 12.07vdc it was getting from my salvaged computer PS. I could only manage about 60 to 65 watts from it without over driving it from the radio. With the Workman running at 13.97vdc, I am getting a nice steady 98w. A big payoff.
Next, low center, is a small lamp which lights green and shows power I guess. Then to the right is the rocker on-off switch. A nice large and solid switch which also lights up, so that little green lamp is redundant.
What I don't care for is the internal fan. It is loud and it seems it is getting louder. There are big heat fins on the back and I doubt I will ever drive this power supply to the point it gets warm, let alone hot.
First impression was, this sucker is heavy, 29 pounds. I got it out of the box and right away looked for any damages. The box was OK, it had an outer box with fiberglass strapping on it, then an inner box for the PS. Both were in good condition. But, by the outerbox, which came from China to some warehouse here, told the story, it had never been opened since leaving the factory. The PS itself was very well protected with big high density foam inserts holding the PS away from any box damage.
So looking around the power supply itself, it is nice and solid, a full metal jacket, good feet on it. The Cons were that the Voltage meter was in the hole but loose. [You can see the glue where I glued it in tight.] I could get a finger nail under one side and pull it out a bit, but not all the way. The Amp meter was nice and tight. The meters are not lighted. The AC cord is cheap plastic covered wires, nothing in the quality neighborhood of say a computer cord and no third prong ground nor wide prong for polarity.
On the front are two posts for + and - connection. I might have preferred they were in the back. These are hollow posts and the screw caps do come off to use either a spade tip or a full circle tip connector. I happened to have a set of jumpers in my electronics drawer with expanding tips that also just happened to fit into the hollow posts, so I cut these in half and soldered and heat shrinked the red and blacks of the amp together for a solid connection.
Also on the front and the main reason I bought this model is a dial to adjust voltage. This is a big plus for me. At present I am using a RM KL 200-P amp, that I wanted to feed with more than the 12.07vdc it was getting from my salvaged computer PS. I could only manage about 60 to 65 watts from it without over driving it from the radio. With the Workman running at 13.97vdc, I am getting a nice steady 98w. A big payoff.
Next, low center, is a small lamp which lights green and shows power I guess. Then to the right is the rocker on-off switch. A nice large and solid switch which also lights up, so that little green lamp is redundant.
What I don't care for is the internal fan. It is loud and it seems it is getting louder. There are big heat fins on the back and I doubt I will ever drive this power supply to the point it gets warm, let alone hot.