The mobile amplifier looks legit. The SD1446 RF transistors it uses require very little drive. A typical CB with a single final transistor is probably a good match for it. A "10-meter" radio with double the wattage might overdo it. Or might not.
I have never seen an "Earthquake"-branded amplifier that looked like it was built right. The transistors in that one are dated 1998. The "9804" marking shows the fourth week of 1998. The amplifier was probably built soon after that.
The mobile's RF transistors have a date code of "391E. I know how to read the four-digit format, but not this one. It looks like a 1990s product.
Just be certain to keep the antenna SWR low. A hazard that 's often overlooked is coax jumper cables. Between the radio and amplifier, between the amplifier and a wattmeter for example. The outer shield layer of the coax tends to work loose inside the plug. This can raise SWR just as if you had broken a piece off of the antenna. Ham radios tend to include a SWR sensor and a safety-shutdown circuit of some kind. These amplifiers don't. It's up to the operator to keep the thing safe from high SWR damage.
The base amp is a hot rod. The unregulated power supply is meant to goose the RF transistors to more than their ratings. This reduces the safety margin in the event something in the antenna system were to go bad.
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