I was hoping someone more knowledgeable than me (that shouldn't be difficult to find) can tell me why an external power supply would have two hot pins of the same voltage instead of just one.
I have a Samson MDR1688 mixer that uses an external 18VAC power supply with a 3 pin connector. It shows pins 1 and 3 as 18AC and pin 2 as common. Why would they use two seemingly identical hot pins instead of just one? I would understand if they were two different voltages or one was AC and the other DC, but why two of the same supply?
The reason I am asking is I would like to use a different power supply than the original. The form factor of the original is very "blocky" and I was hoping to find a flatter one like you see with flat top PCs. I can find 18VAC 1.5A power supplies but they have only two wires (18VAC & ground). Can I just jumper the other hot wire to feed the other hot pin?
Thanks!
I have a Samson MDR1688 mixer that uses an external 18VAC power supply with a 3 pin connector. It shows pins 1 and 3 as 18AC and pin 2 as common. Why would they use two seemingly identical hot pins instead of just one? I would understand if they were two different voltages or one was AC and the other DC, but why two of the same supply?
The reason I am asking is I would like to use a different power supply than the original. The form factor of the original is very "blocky" and I was hoping to find a flatter one like you see with flat top PCs. I can find 18VAC 1.5A power supplies but they have only two wires (18VAC & ground). Can I just jumper the other hot wire to feed the other hot pin?
Thanks!
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