Hi everyone
I've been doing a lot of reading about this issue and I was hoping I could get some clarification.
I want to power a car stereo receiver (head unit only, max 10A draw) at home with a computer psu.
I have 12v wires to the red ACC wire and yellow constant wire, with grounds connected and the green wire hooked up to a switch with a ground wire to turn the unit on and off.
The problem is that I can get it to switch on, but once I turn it off it loses all presets.
My understanding is that the memory requires 12V at some unknown, but low current. The power supply has a 5v stand-by rail that I think is on all the time. however, I obviously need 12V!
I'm thinking of buying a psu with a 12v stand by rail- something like this...
http
/www.ebay.com.au/itm/261751787402?_trksid=p2055119.m1438.l2649&ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AIT
The problem is that assuming this 12vsb is always on, it will only provide a small amount of current. The ACC line is just for switching the unit on, so so how do I connect the high current 12v rail? Can I connect the 12vsb and high current 12v rails to the yellow constant wire somehow- ie with diodes?
Also, can anyone confirm for me that the stand by rails are actually on all the time?
If not are there any other solutions?
I don't want to leave it on all the time!
thanks for your help in advance
Grant
I've been doing a lot of reading about this issue and I was hoping I could get some clarification.
I want to power a car stereo receiver (head unit only, max 10A draw) at home with a computer psu.
I have 12v wires to the red ACC wire and yellow constant wire, with grounds connected and the green wire hooked up to a switch with a ground wire to turn the unit on and off.
The problem is that I can get it to switch on, but once I turn it off it loses all presets.
My understanding is that the memory requires 12V at some unknown, but low current. The power supply has a 5v stand-by rail that I think is on all the time. however, I obviously need 12V!
I'm thinking of buying a psu with a 12v stand by rail- something like this...
http

The problem is that assuming this 12vsb is always on, it will only provide a small amount of current. The ACC line is just for switching the unit on, so so how do I connect the high current 12v rail? Can I connect the 12vsb and high current 12v rails to the yellow constant wire somehow- ie with diodes?
Also, can anyone confirm for me that the stand by rails are actually on all the time?
If not are there any other solutions?
I don't want to leave it on all the time!
thanks for your help in advance
Grant