Doing Things Wrong

KMise Guitar Pedal Power Supply * Cable

First, I am bound to state that I received this product at no cost for review. Having gotten that out of the way ...

This is a 2-amp negative-tip 9-volt power supply for guitar effects pedals. This supply has more than enough power to drive multiple effects pedals, and the 8-way split "Daisy Chain" cable lets you do just that. You can neatly power up your entire pedal board with a single connection.

This can save a fortune on batteries, but it also has an even greater benefit. Modern 9-volt batteries have a 100% chance of leaking. Forget one inside a device, and by the time you realize it, it is too late - the caustic mange from the battery will have eaten up the electronics. It is much safer to simply never use batteries. More and more pedals nowadays cannot even use a battery, they require a power supply, and this setup is ideal for that.

The main drawback of using a plugged-in power supply is line noise - the 60-cycle hum of alternating current. This supply does a good job of filtering out this noise and providing clean quiet power to your effects. That is a matter of how many filtering stages are incorporated into the design. In addition to noise coming in on the power line, there is 60-cycle ambient hum all around us. Both the power supply and the cables are shielded against this as well. This unit compares quite well to my much more expensive One-Spot supply; both are nearly silent.

I'll probably use this hefty power supply mainly to power my home-made portable amp. My old power supply for that was very noisy, this one is quiet, and has more than enough power to drive the amp with its on-board effects, and a few external effects as well. I needed an inexpensive polarity changer, as the power jack on the amp is center-positive. Now I can take the batteries out of the amp before they wreck it.

So save a little money on batteries, and a lot of money on the pedals those batteries would destroy, and get yourself one of these power supplies.

Buy on Amazon:

Update:

I have found a spot in my house where this power supply is extremely noisy, almost screeching. My 1Spot is also noisy at this location, but not nearly as bad. At at other places, this unit is fairly quiet.


This beauty is Evets' reissue of a 1960s Danelectro Hornet. The solid-body Hornet has the same body outline as the Silvertone 1452, a sort-of cross between a 1457 and a Fender Jazzmaster. But unlike the slab-sided 1452, the body of the Hornet is a continuous curve, front and back, with a completely rounded edge. ( This is as sexy as a guitar gets, but makes it a little slippery on your knee. ) The reissue from Evets has the same contours as the original, and even the same 'lightshow' pickguard. The three-tone sunburst on this one was an exclusive to Guitar Center. I picked this one up as an 'open-box' from their subsidiary Music123 for a song, so to speak. The body was originally slathered in dullcote, which I polished off, resulting in a beautiful shine with just a bit of orange peel that I left.