As long as it puts out the 12 volts +, and amperage you need to safely operate the radio, you are good! Then its just a matter of Amp Hours, that determines how long you can use it!
Wow that is nice but it would need more than 2 amps at 5vdc to run a Pi4. Sure it will and is fine at the boosted 12vdc for the 6100. I'll look further to find something that is less current limited.
Maybe you can use a step down cable from the 9 or 12v DC power out to get your needed 5v and whatever amps you need for the raspberry PI 4 like this one? www.amazon.com/Eonvic-Micro-Right-Angle-Nucleus/dp/B088FKNTNV?th=1
The "8800 mAh" figure means almost nothing by itself. What voltage? Internal cell voltage? 5 volts? 9volts? 12 volts? The nameplate on the back of your battery also said the 12-volt output was limited to 2 Amps. The 6100 uses 2.35 Amps at 13.8 volts (32.43 Watts as measured in the ARRL lab) and your battery is only rated to supply 24 Watts. I suspect the 6100 will just shut off if you tried to transmit at full power. You may get away with it at 5 Watts.
@@MarkWarrick - What was the voltage being displayed on the radio DURING a full-power transmission? Were you getting a full 10 Watts while using this battery? How did you calculate Watt/hours from the information given?
very good this sdr ,😃 congratulations , little power, but it works well, exiting a linear transistorized 5w of this radio, how much does it come to an end? my dream, soon I will have Mine, I have radio kenwood Ts850s and dsp100. ok Mark ,good contacts, many friends73 PP2ZM-QRZ. Brazil..😅
friend, your footage is being damaged, your cell phone catches the light reflected on the radio x6100 screen, film against the light so that your reflection of your face image does not appear..the light hinders us from seeing the screen, thanks for the videos 73
As long as it puts out the 12 volts +, and amperage you need to safely operate the radio, you are good! Then its just a matter of Amp Hours, that determines how long you can use it!
I have a usbp cable and compatible portable powerbank and it works fine too.
What kind of cable are you using to connect the two
Standard DC tips on each end.
Wow that is nice but it would need more than 2 amps at 5vdc to run a Pi4. Sure it will and is fine at the boosted 12vdc for the 6100. I'll look further to find something that is less current limited.
Maybe you can use a step down cable from the 9 or 12v DC power out to get your needed 5v and whatever amps you need for the raspberry PI 4 like this one? www.amazon.com/Eonvic-Micro-Right-Angle-Nucleus/dp/B088FKNTNV?th=1
@@MarkWarrick 5v at 2A right on the front USB it is probably all current regulted
FYI "alternate" and "alternative" are not the same word.
The "8800 mAh" figure means almost nothing by itself. What voltage? Internal cell voltage? 5 volts? 9volts? 12 volts? The nameplate on the back of your battery also said the 12-volt output was limited to 2 Amps. The 6100 uses 2.35 Amps at 13.8 volts (32.43 Watts as measured in the ARRL lab) and your battery is only rated to supply 24 Watts. I suspect the 6100 will just shut off if you tried to transmit at full power. You may get away with it at 5 Watts.
I was running the radio with 12 Volts, plenty for full power operation. That works out to 96 watt hours. It’s about the same as an 8ah Bioenno.
@@MarkWarrick - What was the voltage being displayed on the radio DURING a full-power transmission? Were you getting a full 10 Watts while using this battery? How did you calculate Watt/hours from the information given?
@@g-whiz286 12 volts and yes it operates at full power. Use the amps to watts formula.
very good this sdr ,😃 congratulations , little
power, but it works well, exiting a
linear transistorized 5w of this radio, how much
does it come to an end? my dream, soon I will have
Mine, I have radio kenwood Ts850s and dsp100. ok Mark ,good contacts, many friends73 PP2ZM-QRZ.
Brazil..😅
That said 8800 maH not ma. Big huge diff there:)
friend, your footage is being damaged, your cell phone catches the light reflected on the radio x6100 screen, film against the light so that your reflection of your face image does not appear..the light hinders us from seeing the screen, thanks for the videos 73