Product Description
CIOKS (pronounced "chucks") is taking over the power supply industry, one product at a time. Their products are easy to use, very high quality, and feature rich!
Supplying your pedalboard with isolated power doesn’t necessitate a bulky power supply. Within the CIOKS DC7’s tiny 1-inch profile lurks a 2-stage switch-mode power supply with low-noise multi-stage filtering. Its seven isolated DC outlets boast six watts each, or 660mA at 9V if you want us to be specific. Each outlet is switchable between 9V, 12V, 15V, or 18V, enabling you to feed juice to just about any stompbox out there. You also get a 5V USB outlet for charging your smartphone or tablet, and a 24V auxiliary output for expansion via CIOKS 4 or CIOKS 8 units.
FEATURES
- Groundbreaking 1-inch profile
- 7 isolated outlets - Switchable individually to 9V, 12V, 15V, or 18V
- 660mA at 9V DC on each outlet
- 5V USB outlet
- 24V DC auxiliary outlet
- Expandable with CIOKS 4 or CIOKS 8
- Built-in power meter
- 12 Flex cables included
- Universal mains input 90 to 265V AC
- Compatible with CIOKS GRIP
- 5-year worldwide warranty
INCLUDES
- CIOKS DC7 power supply
- Mains power cord
- 12 Flex cables:
- Standard Flex type 1 – black with 5,5/2,1mm centre negative DC plug x7
- Standard Flex type 2 – red with 5,5/2,1mm centre positive DC plug x1
- Standard Flex type 4 – green with 5,5/2,5mm centre positive DC plug x1
- Standard Flex type 5 – black with tip positive 3,5mm Jack plug x1
- Split Flex type 1 – powers two pedals of a single outlet x1
- 3-way Daisy chain Flex type 1 – powers three pedals of a single outlet x1
- Mounting hardware: 2 screws and a hex-key
- Manual
- Product sheet (drill guide)
- Flex guide
Fun notes: "CIOKS is rooted in a danish word Tjåks. There isn't really an equivalent pronunciation in English. It's somewhere in between 'checks' and 'chucks' (like Chuck Norris). Something like 'chiucks', if that were a word. They recommend people just say 'Chucks", probably because we English speakers generally kinda suck at pronouncing non-English words. However, most people in North America pronounce it CHOCKS. ;)"