We have used the cheaper chinesium 30-Amp versions from chinaBay with good luck so far.
The factory supply has no current limiting. As a result, it's vulnerable to damage. Also it has no protection from excess output voltage. Our experience was that sooner or later one of the 2N3771 would short, shooting unregulated 24 Volts into the radio, typically croaking the front-panel computer.
The Megawatt supply is fully protected both ways. Haven't tried one of those yet, so I'll have to take someone else's word that it fits where the 30-Amp versions will go.
Due to the reliability issues with the older power supply we replace it with a 30-Amp rated switchmode "brick" any time it causes trouble in a customer's radio. I don't need the headache of a radio that fails after it goes home.
In fairness, the cheaper chinese supplies sometimes fail new out of the box. We buy them 4 or 5 at a time and test before installing in a customer's radio. The occasional dud raises the overall cost, but the lower price keeps the price of repair jobs down. So far we haven't had any of them fail in the customer's radio, so long as we test it before it's installed.
If you're maintaining your own radio, the more-expensive Megawatt supply is the safer bet, less likely to cause you trouble. The economics of fixing just one radio is a bit different from fixing a dozen of them.
There is one odd symptom we have seen from the factory supply with the heavy transformer. The lights would flash brighter than normal, just briefly when the mike is unkeyed. Never did get to the bottom of what causes this. We did learn that it's a warning from the regulator circuit that a breakdown is coming soon. If you see the radio do this, pull the plug from the wall until you can install a switchmode brick. That brief flash is a warning that the regulator will fail and run away, shooting unregulated voltage into the radio some time soon.
There is one safety measure we install in the 'big' black radios no matter what. A fuse in line with the power wire to the radio pc board. You wouldn't power a 5-Amp mobile radio from a 25-Amp power supply without a fuse, right? But that's what's inside that cabinet as it comes from the factory. Not exactly russian roullette, but close enough.
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