Mister Fish loudhailer speaker, & the Garmin GHS 10

While I may have driven the dogs in my neighborhood slightly nuts, I did satisfy myself that this new loudhailer horn speaker works quite well. Mister Fish Marine Electronics is primarily an online dealer, but this 40 watt, 4 ohm speaker is their own design. The goal was improved longevity and sound over the "inexpensive" speakers while maintaining a reasonable cost, and my first impression -- given the $89 price, shipping included -- is "goal achieved." It feels solidly built and purportedly contains "lubricated internal o-ring gaskets" and all stainless hardware. And the sound is darn good, which I was able to hear in multiple ways thanks to the Garmin VHF 200...
In fact, I'm going to test this combination further on Gizmo this season, and am hopeful that it may even serve as the "manly horn" I dreamt about last season. The GHS 10, incidentally, is an impressive full function remote, but I do find that screen a little hard to read in some light conditions. In the photo below I have the backlighting and contrast turned up to the max, and the handset is in favorable light. But that's a small font (on a 2-inch display) for a lot of us old cusses, and if Garmin could make it bigger on some screens, that would be a good thing.

I just got a GHS 10 tonight as part of a VHF 300 AIS package and I'm returning it. While I may not be transmitting on the VHF that often, I do want to frequently check that it's on the proper channel. The little screen makes that nigh impossible, especially if the handset is hung low on the helm casework, which is what I would prefer.
In the end, the plan to do away with the standard helm-mounted "box of buttons" VHF doesn't quite work. Perhaps Garmin should introduce a remote display (or better yet, add support for the black box VHFs to the GMI 10 display).