Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
When I said "I've got a Japanese Akai S1000 sampler", I actually meant "I'm
selling a Japanese Akai S1000 sampler for someone else". As a result, I didn't know much about the unit and its condition. But I asked the owner what she used to do with regards to power supply and she gave me the transformer that she had been running it off for the past 7 years or so. Surprise surprise - it's a 240V to 115V transformer, and she said the Akai always worked fine despite being labelled 100V. In other words, she'd been using an incorrect transformer for years, but it worked anyway. A buyer emailed me today from eBay asking if the screen was still bright or if it had gone dim with age, so I plugged in the sampler using aforementioned 115V transformer and promptly got an electric shock from an area on the sampler's case where a bit of the paint had been scratched off, leaving bare metal. It is worth bearing in mind that I was barefoot and standing on a concrete garage floor, but nevertheless, this shouldn't happen. I plugged it in again and the same thing happened. However, when turned on, the sampler worked fine - it just gave me a shock whenever I touched the case (a sizeable electric shock, not like static). The owner said that she'd never experienced this before despite using the sampler with the same transformer on a UK mains supply. One thing I noticed about the unit was that it used a 2-pin power lead with apparently no earth. As in, the socket on the machine only had 2 pins, so there was no option to use an earthed cable (even though the transformer had earthed sockets). What's the deal with this? Can anything be done? Obviously I can't sell a unit on eBay in Very Good Condition if it shocks you when you plug it in, even if it works fine otherwise. Is my only option to sell it as-seen with a buyer warning? Thanks, -- tj hertz |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
100V appliance on 110v power supply | Pro Audio | |||
KISS 113 by Andre Jute | Vacuum Tubes | |||
here is how firewire ports fail | Pro Audio | |||
List of NOS mostly tubes | Vacuum Tubes | |||
FS: SOUNDSTREAM CLOSEOUTS AND MORE!! | Car Audio |