If you want an off-the-shelf one, look at an EP-925, sold under various brand names; Manson, Voltcraft etc.
Or this is something similar to what you want, as a DIY one; I remembered seeing it in my garage a few weeks ago while looking for some other items.
The construction is somewhat primitive and cringeworthy by my presents standards, but it is around 40 years old; I remember building it when I still has a shed as a workshop at my parents house.
It also has 40 year accumulation of dust inside, which I cannot remove from the deeper recesses easily; but it's a realistic DIY high current adjustable supply, if a slightly odd one.
The only transformer I could obtain at the time that had an adequate power rating was a 24V one, far too high to regulate conventionally to 12V or less without dissipating crazy amounts of heat - so it's a "secondary switcher" design, what would now be called a buck regulator.
The outline regulator was in the applications notes of a data book, for some make of 78xx or 317 voltage regulator, using one of those as voltage sense and a "high current" driver for external transistors with some positive feedback for hysteresis.
I remember the principle but have no idea of the actual circuit, so I cannot provide that, sorry..
The bridge rec is the part with four upright terminals bolted to the base of the case in front of the big capacitor & the big silver cap the initial smoothing from that.
The blue capacitor is the output smoothing and the round aluminium item at the side of the two caps in the top view is a large "pot core", with the winding for the inductor. The diode that goes with that is attached directly to the top of the larger cap and insulated with duct tape
Most of the other small components are on the tagboard.
Well, it still works, so it can't be all that bad!
The socket at the top of the back panel with white wires is a plug-in 12V output for equipment, the bottom corner socket is main input.
The aluminium can across in front of the transformer is a mains RFI filter.
The left hand front panel switch is the on/off one and the right is a spring loaded one that switches the meter to voltage rather than current, while pressed. The voltage adjustment is the slotted pot on the rear panel.
[I've made others since this, but for other people; some much! larger, but I don't have any details or photos].
Edit - just searched for 78_ based switching regulator circuits & found several using pretty much an identical and familiar-looking configuration, though my version was adapted for much higher current & variable voltage: