It should work fine in the 9v 300ma port and you should get zero electric hum from this power supply. It is a fully isolated supply and is designed specifically to eliminate hum/noise.
@@HumbledGround Thanks. Which dial is '12' in order to use a 12v pedal? I'm doing all the research before buying an expensive power supply. I also read that the wall adapter was short and skinny?
Dumb question. I have this connected to a power strip and my amp to the wall outlet. Should I have the brick turned on first? Or the amp? And which way when turning off. Thanks!
Hi Sara, sorry for the late reply - I've been away for a while. The voltage knobs set the voltage for the plug the are beside of. You can also tell which plug it is by looking at the voltage under it and it will say 6-15v. Make sure you set the proper voltage for the pedal you are plugging it into. If you do not know the voltage for the pedal, check with the manufacturer of it to find out what its tolerances are. Happy playing!
This might be a dumb question but I'm pretty new to this. If you have a bunch of 9v 100ma pedals, can you only use the two designated spots? Or can you use the 9v spots with higher outputs?
you can use the higher mA slots! voltage needs to match, but for current you just need to make sure your pedal’s current draw is less than the supply’s current output. for example, a pedal that draws 100mA will work fine in a 300mA slot, but it wouldn’t work in a 50mA slot
Thank you for asking; I know naught about electricity and have a bunch of pedals on a daisy chain that I want to isolate. I don’t mind experimenting, just don’t wanna fry anything.
can you plug a 9v pedal into the 18v connection? or that would fry your pedal??? just checking as all my pedals are only 9v and I have more than 6-8 thanks
Hope I’m not too late but don’t plug a 9v pedal into an 18v connection. There are some drive pedals that could run 9-18v. Check with your pedal’s manual or look up the specs online
what are the dimensions of the power supply?. I checked a dozen sites and found every thing from 7x5x3 to 4x3x1.5. this is a pretty critical bit of information, really.
It is supposed to be a quick, down and dirty review of features. Not much more you can do for a power supply unfortunately. And thanks for the feedback, I will try to add a little more not he next one.
@@HumbledGround I thought it was the perfect length. You gave us all the information we needed without skipping anything or wasting our time with extra information. Great review in my opinion.
Wow! I was on the fence about buying the pack because it looked sketchy. Thanks for the review, I'll grab one.
It's a great little kit, enjoy and thanks for watching!
@@HumbledGround Do you experience any hum? If I have a 300mA 9v pedal would I plug it into the 450mA slot?
It should work fine in the 9v 300ma port and you should get zero electric hum from this power supply. It is a fully isolated supply and is designed specifically to eliminate hum/noise.
@@HumbledGround Thanks. Which dial is '12' in order to use a 12v pedal? I'm doing all the research before buying an expensive power supply. I also read that the wall adapter was short and skinny?
About 2.5 ticks past 9v will be 12v. The power supply is 3 inches long by 1-3/4 inches wide and deep.
Dumb question. I have this connected to a power strip and my amp to the wall outlet. Should I have the brick turned on first? Or the amp? And which way when turning off. Thanks!
I dont get how the voltage knobs work, its for a row or for an individual plug or what?
Hi Sara, sorry for the late reply - I've been away for a while. The voltage knobs set the voltage for the plug the are beside of. You can also tell which plug it is by looking at the voltage under it and it will say 6-15v. Make sure you set the proper voltage for the pedal you are plugging it into. If you do not know the voltage for the pedal, check with the manufacturer of it to find out what its tolerances are. Happy playing!
Is it quieter? Im looking to buy this
This might be a dumb question but I'm pretty new to this. If you have a bunch of 9v 100ma pedals, can you only use the two designated spots? Or can you use the 9v spots with higher outputs?
you can use the higher mA slots! voltage needs to match, but for current you just need to make sure your pedal’s current draw is less than the supply’s current output. for example, a pedal that draws 100mA will work fine in a 300mA slot, but it wouldn’t work in a 50mA slot
Thank you for asking; I know naught about electricity and have a bunch of pedals on a daisy chain that I want to isolate. I don’t mind experimenting, just don’t wanna fry anything.
can you plug a 9v pedal into the 18v connection? or that would fry your pedal??? just checking as all my pedals are only 9v and I have more than 6-8
thanks
Hope I’m not too late but don’t plug a 9v pedal into an 18v connection. There are some drive pedals that could run 9-18v. Check with your pedal’s manual or look up the specs online
what are the dimensions of the power supply?. I checked a dozen sites and found every thing from 7x5x3 to 4x3x1.5. this is a pretty critical bit of information, really.
Someone please answer him
ThaNKS @@nozbuz4001 , but i bought a CIOKS dc 7
I blinked and it was over! I don't see much of a review, more an unboxing. :(
It is supposed to be a quick, down and dirty review of features. Not much more you can do for a power supply unfortunately. And thanks for the feedback, I will try to add a little more not he next one.
@@HumbledGround I thought it was the perfect length. You gave us all the information we needed without skipping anything or wasting our time with extra information. Great review in my opinion.
Showing how it attaches to a pedal board would have been most helpful!!...But NO!! "Hey look at me, i have a new power supply. ner ner ner ner ner"