Introduction: Makita DMR104W Radio Modifications

About: I am an engineer by trade, qualified to HNC level in electrical/electronic engineering. I have to use a wide variety of skills at work including electrical, mechanical fitting, welding and hydraulics. I am a k…

Here is my Makita radio which I felt was lacking a few features in it's original form.

Step 1: The Orginal Radio

I wanted a Makita DAB radio but found it didn't come with bluetooth, this only comes with the FM version. So I bought the DMR104W model and I first used a bluetooth dongle plugged into the aux socket but found I had to keep connecting to it and charging it. After looking on the internet I found a few people had modified these radios to include a 12V radio decoder audio module complete with bluetooth, USB and SD card reader and a remote control these modules are designed to be fitted into a car. I also saw a few other interesting modifications which gave me some ideas.

Step 2: The Parts

So I bought some parts off ebay including a Bluetooth radio module, a 2 port USB charger socket, a cigarette lighter socket, illuminated rocker switches and fuse holders.

My plan was to fit the radio module to give me Bluetooth, USB sockets for charging phones etc and the cigarette lighter socket so I could plug in accessories like a LED work light. Each of these to be switched on/off by individual switches and have fuse protection.

Step 3: Cutting and Fitting

Next came the scariest part drilling and cutting holes in the radio case. I decided to mount the cigarette lighter and the USB sockets on top as they have dust covers and would have protection when working on dusty sites. The radio module, switches and fuses holder were fitted on the right hand side to keep them all neatly together also the left hand side has a large metal plate on the inside used as a ground plane for the aerial. I managed to fit the radio module where the DAB logo was and it fits in just right in between the moulded lines. The fuse holders fitted perfectly in the space in front of the handle with the switches in a row below them. The output of the radio I connected to the AUX 2 input in the radio's battery compartment using a 3.5mm plug giving me the option of still using the input for something else if I want.

Step 4: Getting Power

The radio takes different Makita batteries and can also run off a mains adapter. I wanted all my mods to operate off all these as well, but was concerned about extra loading being put on the built in regulator pcb and possibly damaging the regulators. So built my own regulator board with two regulators one for the cigarette lighter socket and the other for the radio module and the USB sockets I also fitted diodes to block voltages being fed back to the output of the original regulators just in case they didn't like it. I mounted the regulators on a small piece of aluminium to act as a heat sink and it also gave my an ideal way to fix it at the rear of the case above the original regulator board.

Step 5: The Finished Item

Once everything was fitted it was just a case of wiring it all in. Like I said all the different battery connectors and the mains adaptor input connect to my regulator board, with one regulator supplying the cigarette lighter socket via a fuse and the other regulator supplying the USB sockets and the radio module via the second fuse and each one can be switch on/off by it's own switch.
So far it has worked well and once I connected my phone via Bluetooth it remembers the pairing so no need to keep reconnecting.

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