NickS wrote:I've had one of these for about 18 months:
I was using it yesterday afternoon, no issues; took it to the jam and it was dead when plugged in.
The dead bit is the 12V 1A wall-wart SMPSU, so I'll have to buy a new one of those and wire it into the box/regulator.
is £5.99 delivered.
One reason for having old-fashioned batteries in pedals, though - as backup for when your PSU dies.
i have one of those i don't use if you want it?
Fender Classic Player 60’s Stratocaster>East Coast T1 Tele>
Epiphone Les Paul SL>Ovation 12 String acoustic>Peavey Strat DIY Relic
Marshall Origin 20H>James’s old purple 2x10
Marshall MG10 Combo
I use onespot to, it's cheap and noisy, but i like to play loud or with lots of fuzz. I heard that if you use a boss tu2 on the daisy chain it filters the noise from the onespot, is this true?
I use onespot to, it's cheap and noisy, but i like to play loud or with lots of fuzz. I heard that if you use a boss tu2 on the daisy chain it filters the noise from the onespot, is this true?
Never had a problem with mine except with the RE-20. I even powered a pedalboard with a Deluxe Electric Mistress with the 1Spot.
I've got a dunlop power brick that i've been using for like 9 months. It works well, very quiet, has lots of inputs and two different voltages, and several different connector styles to fit various pedal inputs (all modular). I don't think you could ask for much more out of a psu.
St. Jimmy wrote:i didn't put fuck-all in your mouth, other than a dick of truth.
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Progrockabuse wrote:i have one of those i don't use if you want it?
PM'd, Rob's a great guy.
I took the SMPSU apart and found the input fuse blown. 2A time delay, about 3.5mm x 11mm, wire-ended. Maplin does nothing like it, so if I wanted to try a repair I'm looking at a minimum order value of £5-£10 on-line. Another piece of electronics for the tip...
NickS wrote:One reason for having old-fashioned batteries in pedals, though - as backup for when your PSU dies.
My one spot died on me at the end of last year .... I bought some rechargable batteries for home use..... lucky for me I don't use power hungry pedals like delays, so they last for ages without being recharged.
Had a 1spot for about two years or more now. Heavy gig and practice use without any problems at all. I just recently bought another, rebadged by Rocktron as I've given the VS one to my brother. There are at least three brands of these power-all power supplies now, Visual Sound 1spot, Behringer and Rocktron. I think Stagg have just released one too, which is half the price of the others.
and very good it is too. can't rate them highly enough.
got your PM nickS. will reply shortly.
I am wondering whether it's worth the extra £10 that it costs more than the Visual Sound, Behringer and Rocktron versions, though. I assume it's pretty much identical?
I was looking forward to them making one for like, a tenner or something, or maybe one so cheap that they actually pay you for the botheration of having to carry it home.
I was looking forward to them making one for like, a tenner or something, or maybe one so cheap that they actually pay you for the botheration of having to carry it home.
Disappointed.
£30 delivered isn't that bad, to be honest. The Stagg one is £10, but without any additional cables or daisy chain. Buying them would probably make it around £18 or so.
I was thinking about my Visual Sound though: I must have bought it years ago because I ended up getting it from America because absolutely nobody stocked them here, or if they did, they were £40 or something. From the US (and the store stocked both the UK and US plug options!) it cost about £25 with P&P. I was well chuffed.
and very good it is too. can't rate them highly enough.
got your PM nickS. will reply shortly.
I am wondering whether it's worth the extra £10 that it costs more than the Visual Sound, Behringer and Rocktron versions, though. I assume it's pretty much identical?
the carl martin cost me £29 quid with all the adapters and daisy chain and shizzle. really long cable too, gotta be about 4-5 metres. think they're all kinda similar.
not had any noise or anything since i started using it. my last power supply (those ac/dc older maplin things) introduce noise and only 3 of the 5 outputs worked.
Fender Classic Player 60’s Stratocaster>East Coast T1 Tele>
Epiphone Les Paul SL>Ovation 12 String acoustic>Peavey Strat DIY Relic
Marshall Origin 20H>James’s old purple 2x10
Marshall MG10 Combo
Well, I've ordered one of those £6 wall warts to get the old box up and running. I also spent some time last night adding smoothing to some old Mascot brand 9V 300 mA supplies that we used to use for network kit. They work fine with Line 6 ToneCore (DSP-based) pedals but have far too much mains ripple for ordinary analogue pedals.
First I tried adding an LM317T voltage regulator; the off-load input voltage of 11V peak resulted in a rather ripply 8.5V - not enough headroom on the input side for the regulator to work properly. Possibly a pair of ultra-low-drop-out 150 mA regulators would work, but I didn't have them in stock
Next I tried increasing the smoothing cap from 2200uF to 4700uF and trying two different approaches to ripple reduction; 2.7 ohm resistor followed by the original 2200uF cap and 1 ohm resistor followed by another 4700uF cap. Neither totally eliminated PSU hum compared to batteries, using the Behringer Ultra Fuzz UF100, but they are at least usable.