Posted: Tue Jun 09, 2009 12:48 pm
The Diago Powerstation is smaller, lighter and has more power than the DC Brick. The DC Brick is also not as disimilar to the Maplin supply as you would like to think.
The Power Station looks pretty good, especially the adapter for battery-only pedals. You have to buy all the adapters at extra cost, however, so I'm not sure how much it would come to in the end. Also, things that suck a lot of juice tend to have weird & wonderful wall warts so I'm not sure how useful that 3amps would be unless you really were going to power like 30 pedals. If I was looking for a new brick though, I'd definitely consider it it does look pretty damn good.Mike wrote:The Diago Powerstation is smaller, lighter and has more power than the DC Brick. The DC Brick is also not as disimilar to the Maplin supply as you would like to think.
The first i've heard bad things about the Maplin dc , your friend must have happened across a rogue, I've had my Maplin for nearly 10years with no problems....jamieb wrote:You get what you pay for, although I wouldn't pay £119 for one.Mike wrote:And it also insanely overpriced.
Happily, they seemed to pop up on Ebay fairly frequently when I was buying one, and I in fact got mine for a measly £50. The Diago daisy-chain thing is £59 (new) on Ebay. A friend of mine bought the £19.99 thing from Maplin and...threw it away. This was after Maplin refused to accept it was a complete piece of shit. He promptly replaced it with a DC Brick and is as happy as Larry.
The end.
Maybe it's just the new(er) ones then, as Mike said he's had his one for ages and it's been no problem. Dunno. The guy who posted in this thread also said he had a problem with his, so would be interesting to know how old it was.Johno wrote: The first i've heard bad things about the Maplin dc , your friend must have happened across a rogue, I've had my Maplin for nearly 10years with no problems....
which, like something else someone mentioned, is fine with a bunch of ordinary pedals, or one of my Line 6 pedals on its own. As soon as you start combining a Line 6 with anything other pedal you get a nasty buzzing. It's powered by a wall-wart transformer that they don't show.Power bank for simultaneous connection of up to 10 effects pedals. 2.1mm DC sockets with negative centre polarity.
Features:
Housed in a robust ABS plastic case
On/Off power switch with integral LED
Supplied with switchmode PSU with fixed 1.4m lead
Supplied with ten 280mm DC-DC power leads
Specifications:
Power supply 100-240Vac, 15W, 50/60Hz
Output 9Vdc, 100mA / outlet
Dimensions 134 x 50 x 43mm
Weight 219g
£23.15
That’s the one I have. I’ve been using it for a couple of years, and have had no problems using it with any of my pedals. Even my boss hm-2 which is one of the old 12 voltish ones (gets an excellent dying battery distortion powering it this way). I also use it power two delay pedals (a boss dd-3 and an old ema analog thing).Mike wrote:I have noticed the graphic on the site seems different to the one I have:
Extra input and smaller but possibly crap?
yeah could be, mines the old Powerbank AC-DC versionjamieb wrote:Maybe it's just the new(er) ones then, as Mike said he's had his one for ages and it's been no problem. Dunno. The guy who posted in this thread also said he had a problem with his, so would be interesting to know how old it was.Johno wrote: The first i've heard bad things about the Maplin dc , your friend must have happened across a rogue, I've had my Maplin for nearly 10years with no problems....
thats the dam power supply that turned me against power supplies for a while. i have one and get constant high pitch buzzing and whining from it when i use any overdrive/dirt pedal with it.NickS wrote:I bought this:
which, like something else someone mentioned, is fine with a bunch of ordinary pedals, or one of my Line 6 pedals on its own. As soon as you start combining a Line 6 with anything other pedal you get a nasty buzzing. It's powered by a wall-wart transformer that they don't show.Power bank for simultaneous connection of up to 10 effects pedals. 2.1mm DC sockets with negative centre polarity.
Features:
Housed in a robust ABS plastic case
On/Off power switch with integral LED
Supplied with switchmode PSU with fixed 1.4m lead
Supplied with ten 280mm DC-DC power leads
Specifications:
Power supply 100-240Vac, 15W, 50/60Hz
Output 9Vdc, 100mA / outlet
Dimensions 134 x 50 x 43mm
Weight 219g
£23.15
I've also got one of these, I've had for a year and its worked fine so far, even with all 6 pedals in use.... I wish it had an led thoMike wrote:I have noticed the graphic on the site seems different to the one I have:
Extra input and smaller but possibly crap?
my pedal board is one of those gator ones, but at the time i brought it without the supply. £50 without against £120 with? i know what i'd choose.the isaac eaton wrote:I bought this gator pedal board a long time ago, it came with a power bank, although im not using that board anymore i am using the power bank still. Gets the job done, i havn't noticed any extra noise or any of that, been working fine for me.
mike is that an old pic or do you not use any of your own pedals?Mike wrote:I have an old Maplin supply which I use for demos these days. I had it on my board for many years. It worked just fine for me powering this little lot:
(note - two digital delays)
You probably got a lemon.
that pic is quite old, i think mike got rid of his first diago board not long after and just used his 30th head and a tuner.holyCATS1415 wrote:mike is that an old pic or do you not use any of your own pedals?Mike wrote:I have an old Maplin supply which I use for demos these days. I had it on my board for many years. It worked just fine for me powering this little lot:
(note - two digital delays)
You probably got a lemon.
I bet they couldn't keep you away from Boulevard.Mike wrote:Old Pic Is Old, that's back when I lived in a flat in Ealing and still owned a Wah pedal. I had never build a pedal at that point,