Head-Fi.org › Forums › Equipment Forums › Headphone Amps (full-size) › Go-Vibe or Home-Vibe?
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

Go-Vibe or Home-Vibe? - Page 2

post #16 of 19
post #17 of 19
@oink1:
the elpac series will not work in europe. i have a mascot 2083 (24V, 0.5A, 230V), ordered at rscomponents. i bought it for my ppa and therefore could use it via a self-built-9v-battery-plug with the go-vibe also. but be careful: it seems a little overpriced (~50 €) for your purposes. just try to find a 12v to 18v linear regulated wallwart - those are easier to get over here.
post #18 of 19
Quote:
Originally Posted by BrokenEnglish
@oink1:
the elpac series will not work in europe. i have a mascot 2083 (24V, 0.5A, 230V), ordered at rscomponents. i bought it for my ppa and therefore could use it via a self-built-9v-battery-plug with the go-vibe also. but be careful: it seems a little overpriced (~50 €) for your purposes. just try to find a 12v to 18v linear regulated wallwart - those are easier to get over here.
acctually iirc the eplac medical line is 120-240 50/60hz

http://www.mouser.com/index.cfm?hand..._pcodeid=68004
that should be good
post #19 of 19
Quote:
Originally Posted by flutie04
acctually iirc the eplac medical line is 120-240 50/60hz

http://www.mouser.com/index.cfm?hand..._pcodeid=68004
that should be good
don't know it exactly, but based on the specs this one seems to be a switching psu - not the best solution for audio-purposes.... watch out for a "linear regulated" one...
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
  Back to Forum: Headphone Amps (full-size)
Head-Fi.org › Forums › Equipment Forums › Headphone Amps (full-size) › Go-Vibe or Home-Vibe?