If you're willing to burn up around 20-40W of power you could also add a
high voltage linear regulator.   Or a couple of diodes in series.
 However, all of those will turn the excess voltage into heat, which is
what the 20-40W is...  2V@10A=20W.

For The amount you're talking about power wise, the meanwell SD series is
probably your best bet.   Almost all of the meanwell supplies have a din
bracket mounting adapter available, although I'm not finding the one for
these.   The RSD series definitely has one but only goes up to around 350W.

On Thu, Jul 11, 2019 at 3:00 PM Sterling Jacobson <sterl...@avative.net>
wrote:

> Sorry to beat a dead horse, but I’m still stuck on this mini-pop DC plant
> thing.
>
>
>
> Is there a DIN mountable voltage regulator that will allow me to feed load
> from 48v battery string without going over 50v at 6-10A?
>
>
>
> I’m still trying to power a couple of MetroLinq 2.5 antennas at the site,
> but people tell me they explode if given more than say 52v.
>
>
>
> Which means my float battery system will kill the radios if it goes into
> recharge mode at 54v?
>
>
>
> Or am I overthinking things?
>
>
>
> Looks like to solve this I would need something like Mean Well $100
> SD-350B-48 between the battery array and the load to assure it sticks
> around 50v.
>
>
>
> Is that my only solution here?
>
>
>
>
> --
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> AF@af.afmug.com
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>


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