Moad
Well-Known Member
Stupidly got 110v instead of 220v.
Anyone interested in them?
Anyone interested in them?
ZacklyMoad said:Shipping is as much as the units.
They will be firmware modded so I guess I could get a little more for them.
I bought a step down transformer for an electric knife sharpener I bought from the states. Cost about $30 but it's heavy, relatively noisy and there's no way I'd leave it on for days at a time. Would be cheaper for someone in Oz to buy a 240v stc but you might recoup half your costs selling o/seas? Actually, considering the $AU and delivery costs, maybe not.verysupple said:A quick search on ebay turned up a bunch of 220/240 V to 110 V converters. I'm not sure how much more you'd want to spend but they seem to be from about $10 up to $30 or so. Also they seem to be Euro/UK/US plugs. But I'm sure if you took more than the 30 sec I spent searching you'd find the right type.
Clearly the sellers fault, supplying what was orderedpcmfisher said:What is wrong with the idiot seller sending a 110v to Australia even if you did order a 110v.
Yep. If you have a 240V unit, or can open one up, you may even be able to find the exact specs and a drop-in replacement. You're right though, the 5A version will probably have very close to the same controller and thus I imagine voltage requirements. STC-1000 uses a PIC controller.Moad said:Do you mean the one on the board stux?
If I had a steady hand and could get the same part as is on the 220V stcs I could give it a crack. I think I have some 5amp ones I could pilfer the transformers from, I am assuming the 5amp relates to the relays
So even if an obviously incorrect order comes through (ie 110v to AU) the seller shouldn't waste their time sending a quick email to possibly avoid sending the wrong thing? :huh:Spiesy said:Clearly the sellers fault, supplying what was ordered