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Hard wiring a handheld UHF
Moderator: -Scott-
Hard wiring a handheld UHF
I have a 5 watt hand held UHF than I cannot find the battery for
I would like to hard wire it and mount it on my dash for use with a hand held mike.
The battery is 11volts and 450 amp hour...
It does have a car charger that plugs into the ciggy socket and I don't believe it has anything in it to drop the charge voltage (the charger that is) it plugs into a socket in the top of the unit. I cannot tell if there is anything inside the top that might alter the voltage to the 11 v's so it's the same as the battery.
My question is: can I connect two wires (obviously the pos and the neg) through a fused outlet direct to the battery terminals on the unit where the battery would normally contact. This would supply 12 volt power to it...would the extra 1 volt do any damage?
The other option is to go to a battery shop and get a new battery...however, this option is cheaper if it works
thanks in advance,
Luke
I would like to hard wire it and mount it on my dash for use with a hand held mike.
The battery is 11volts and 450 amp hour...
It does have a car charger that plugs into the ciggy socket and I don't believe it has anything in it to drop the charge voltage (the charger that is) it plugs into a socket in the top of the unit. I cannot tell if there is anything inside the top that might alter the voltage to the 11 v's so it's the same as the battery.
My question is: can I connect two wires (obviously the pos and the neg) through a fused outlet direct to the battery terminals on the unit where the battery would normally contact. This would supply 12 volt power to it...would the extra 1 volt do any damage?
The other option is to go to a battery shop and get a new battery...however, this option is cheaper if it works
thanks in advance,
Luke
[url=http://www.aussiebowhunter.com][b]Founder TBGA - September 29, 2001 - Australia's Premier Bowhunting Site[/b][/url]
What brand unit is it? You should be able to find something off Ebay, or even second had shops if you look.
You should be able to repack the battery with some NiMH tagged AA cells (Dick Smith)
You should be able to repack the battery with some NiMH tagged AA cells (Dick Smith)
Last edited by DamTriton on Sun Sep 17, 2006 10:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
George Carlin, an American Comedian said; "Think of how stupid the average person is, and realise that half of them are stupider than that".
I'll give it a whirl tomorrow.
Of course it serves another purpose, and that is to have a 5 watt unit in my fourbie. If it works I'll even get me a higher power antenna and hook it up to that....
Of course it serves another purpose, and that is to have a 5 watt unit in my fourbie. If it works I'll even get me a higher power antenna and hook it up to that....
[url=http://www.aussiebowhunter.com][b]Founder TBGA - September 29, 2001 - Australia's Premier Bowhunting Site[/b][/url]
Re: Hard wiring a handheld UHF
Remember that during charging the voltage in a car/4x4 is generally more than 12v. Depending on the regulator, it can be up to 14V.Bowhunter wrote:I have a 5 watt hand held UHF than I cannot find the battery for
My question is: can I connect two wires (obviously the pos and the neg) through a fused outlet direct to the battery terminals on the unit where the battery would normally contact. This would supply 12 volt power to it...would the extra 1 volt do any damage?
Luke
You should be careful with connecting directly where the battery connects on the handheld radio, not all of them have zener diode overvoltage protection like "normal" UHF radios. Generally it's quite hard to fit handheld batteries on backwards so many manufacturers leave reverse polarity/over voltage protection out!
It might work OK when then engine is off, but if the circuit isn't designed for higher than 11V, it might get damaged.
Regards,
Michael.
Re: Hard wiring a handheld UHF
It'll be fine. They are designed to be left on while they are being charged anyway. A 10 cell NiCad/NiMH pack would be 12V off charge and 13.5-14V while being charged, add in a protection diode and you could be looking at 11 volts or so. In all seriousness use the 12V input on the unit with its car ciggie lighter plug adapter.michaelcarey wrote:Remember that during charging the voltage in a car/4x4 is generally more than 12v. Depending on the regulator, it can be up to 14V.Bowhunter wrote:I have a 5 watt hand held UHF than I cannot find the battery for
My question is: can I connect two wires (obviously the pos and the neg) through a fused outlet direct to the battery terminals on the unit where the battery would normally contact. This would supply 12 volt power to it...would the extra 1 volt do any damage?
Luke
You should be careful with connecting directly where the battery connects on the handheld radio, not all of them have zener diode overvoltage protection like "normal" UHF radios. Generally it's quite hard to fit handheld batteries on backwards so many manufacturers leave reverse polarity/over voltage protection out!
It might work OK when then engine is off, but if the circuit isn't designed for higher than 11V, it might get damaged.
Regards,
Michael.
It would still help to know what brand it is so we could do a bit more research on it for you.....
George Carlin, an American Comedian said; "Think of how stupid the average person is, and realise that half of them are stupider than that".
OK, so I took the plunge and wired it up.
I didn't melt anything and there were no explosions Had to be a good start
It will transmit fine, my lil 2 watt uniden handheld wil receive from it no probs.
It will NOT receive however. It is not speaker prob, as when I turn the squelch nob the crackle noise comes out of the speaker...
Does anyone have any ideas what it might be? Would it be fixable (is it something I can do or do you think it's internal and needing an expert's attention).
Thanks boys.
Luke
I didn't melt anything and there were no explosions Had to be a good start
It will transmit fine, my lil 2 watt uniden handheld wil receive from it no probs.
It will NOT receive however. It is not speaker prob, as when I turn the squelch nob the crackle noise comes out of the speaker...
Does anyone have any ideas what it might be? Would it be fixable (is it something I can do or do you think it's internal and needing an expert's attention).
Thanks boys.
Luke
[url=http://www.aussiebowhunter.com][b]Founder TBGA - September 29, 2001 - Australia's Premier Bowhunting Site[/b][/url]
I see where you're coming from but I dont have the battery (lost it moving house or, someone else did ) and am trying to get this to work instead of forking out the $60 or more that it'd cost to get a new battery...-Scott- wrote:Roll back the changes. Remove your wires, install a battery and see if it still works.Bowhunter wrote:Hey fellas, can anyone shed some light on this for me?
thanks,
Luke
[url=http://www.aussiebowhunter.com][b]Founder TBGA - September 29, 2001 - Australia's Premier Bowhunting Site[/b][/url]
Alrighty,
so I found the battery, got it repacked, charged it for 5 hrs and switched it on.
It will still send but not recieve :(
Does anyone know of a place at the Gold Coast or perhaps Brissy that might be able to help me out fixing it?
cheers
Luke
so I found the battery, got it repacked, charged it for 5 hrs and switched it on.
It will still send but not recieve :(
Does anyone know of a place at the Gold Coast or perhaps Brissy that might be able to help me out fixing it?
cheers
Luke
[url=http://www.aussiebowhunter.com][b]Founder TBGA - September 29, 2001 - Australia's Premier Bowhunting Site[/b][/url]
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