ThreeChordWonder
New member
Let me start by saying that I've never bought into the $500 size of a substation pedal power supplies. Most pedals these days only draw 50 to 100 milliamps. There's no way I'm spending megabucks on a power supply, period.
I just changed the wall wart and daisy chain power lead setup for much more modest pwer supply ($50) with parellel offtakes to each pedal. I kept the signal and power cables as far apart as I reasonably could. I was trying to try to deafeat a horrible hum I get from the DS-1, gain only slightly up or all the way up, strummed or not strummed.
The new power supply made no difference.
I even tried running it completely independently using the internal 9 volt battery and that didn't help.
Any ideas (apart from using the bloody thing as a doorstop or wrapping my next complaint letter to GC around it before throwing it through their window)?
I just changed the wall wart and daisy chain power lead setup for much more modest pwer supply ($50) with parellel offtakes to each pedal. I kept the signal and power cables as far apart as I reasonably could. I was trying to try to deafeat a horrible hum I get from the DS-1, gain only slightly up or all the way up, strummed or not strummed.
The new power supply made no difference.
I even tried running it completely independently using the internal 9 volt battery and that didn't help.
Any ideas (apart from using the bloody thing as a doorstop or wrapping my next complaint letter to GC around it before throwing it through their window)?