Features
Fueltank Junior comes with all the cables you need:
- link cable (daisy chain) with 5 DC plugs
- DC-to-DC cables 50cm
- DC-to-DC cables 25cm
- voltage doubler cable that doubles the voltage to 18 volt
Listen up there is a lesson to learn!
When you want to power your pedal from the FuelTank Junior or any other power supply, there are two things you need to know:
1.
What voltage does your pedal accept to be driven?
You need to find this information in the pedal
users manual or on the pedal. Most pedals today accept 9 or 12 volt.
Some need 18 volt. If there is a battery container in the pedal it
usualy just needs 9 volt, but often it also accepts 12 volt.
All T-Rex pedals can run on 12 volt. Some (the
ones with battery container) can also run on 9 volt. But they accept any
voltage between 9 and 12 volt.
If your pedal get's less than the voltage it
needs, there is no danger. It will not break or burn. It just sounds
different or says nothing at all. Some musicians even use old batteries,
that gives less power and therefore the pedal gives another sound -
which they like.
If your pedal get's more voltage than it needs,
there is danger that the pedal will break or even burn. If you are
lucky, it will have a fuse inside (to be replaced), but most pedals
don't.
2. How much power does your pedal consume?
You need to find this information in the pedal
users manual or on the pedal in terms of a sticker, if you are lucky. If
your pedal has a battery container, it usually consumes very little
power, like 20 - 40 mA. If your pedal comes with an adapter, it consumes
a lot more power. That can vary from 100 mA to 1.200 mA, or even more.
Now you are ready to buy and connect your pedal(s) to a power supply.
If your pedal(s), like most other pedals on the
market, accepts 9 volt DC and needs less than 120 mA, you have come to
the right place, FuelTank Junior. Just connect the pedal to one of the
five outputs on the JuicyLucy.
If you have more pedals that accept 9 volt and
together use less than 120 mA, you can run them all from one output on
the Fueltank Junior - by using the link cable. One end of the link cable
goes in one of the outputs on the FuelTank Junior. The other plugs on
the link cable goes into the pedals one by one. The order is irrelevant.
If you've got a pedal which accepts 12 volts only
you cannot use FuelTank Junior. You either need FuelTank Classic or
FuelTank Juicy Lucy, both deliver 12 volts (amongst other things).
If you have a pedal that accepts 18 volts only and
consumes no more than 120 mA, use the yellow voltage doubler cable
which comes with the Junior. It taps 9 volts each from two outputs on
the Junior and converts them to 18 volts. If your pedal consumes more
than 120 mA you cannot use FuelTank Junior.
If you have a pedal that needs 12 AC voltage and
consumes less than 500 mA (like the T-Rex Replica), you cannot use the
Junior. You need to use the FuelTank Classic. It gives 12 volt AC -
among other things.
Notes
Please note that a lot of 9 volt pedals on the
market accepts 12 volt. Lot's of people are not aware of this, because
they usually juts use a 9 volt battery to drive the pedal or a 9 volt
power supply.
Please note that all FuelTanks and all T-Rex
pedals have minus as center, which is normal on the market. That means
the center pin in the DC plugs. Very few pedals use the opposite: Center
pin is positive. If you have a twisted pedal like that, you need to
find a changer cable somewhere on the market, if you want to use a
normal power supply, that has minus as center.
Please note the power distributors on the market.
People and manufacturers call them power supplies, even though they are
not. They don't have a transformer core inside. They are usually feeded
by an adapter and the power is then just distributed in the box to more
output plugs - sometimes in different voltage. Often all outputs share
the same ground, which can give noise.
T-Rex FuelTanks are all real power supllies with
real transfomers inside, developed in Denmark and produced by a Danish
transformer company, that works together with T-Rex.
Good luck!