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br3370

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Location: United StatesMember since: 10 August 2018

All Feedback (22)

6ave (89141)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
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Great communication. A pleasure to do business with.
7eighteenelectronics (11972)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
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Quick response and fast payment. Perfect! THANKS!!
maestrohulk2099 (18)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
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Great buyer! Pleasure doing business with!!
shield_skins (12103)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
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Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer.
hohatronik (25115)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
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Thank
newegg (1030141)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
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Reviews (3)
NEW KENWOOD VGS-1 Voice guide/Storage unit from JAPAN
11 February 2022
VGS-1 quick review
Here in the States, can if you can find one, sells for under $80. Works with all TS480/TS590 variants. happy with product, helping me to figure out TS590S
Msi 251507 Mb H510i Pro Wifi S1200 H510 64gb Ddr4 Pcie Mitx Retail (h510ipwifi)
24 April 2022
Excellent basic board at a good price
Unfortunately, for me this board arrived DOA, bad processor socket. If this board had been working, this review would have been positive. If it was working, this would be a fast board. Somewhat familiar with MSI in general, normally they put out a good product. One suggestion for anyone purchasing any MSI Motherboards, once Windows is installed, remove the Realtech Console. It will get in the way. If you move your speakers/headphone plug from the back to the front or visa versa, the sound may not transfer to the jack you are attempting to use. Other than that, I wouldn't hesitate to recommend this board. Ray
1 of 1 found this helpful
Pyle PSV300 Fully Regulated Low Ripple 30-Amp Switching DC Power Supply
01 March 2022
A ham radio supply almost good enough to use
First of all, both this Pyle PSV300 and the Pyramid PSV-300 are the same product. Why the Pyramid has a higher price tag. Don't know. This was confirmed by two sources. So here's my review of the Pyle Psv300 power supply. This supply was to be used for my ham station. I liked the fact that what you see is what you get. No nonsense. It's great that it has binding posts and not screw terminals. OK, so it has just one set of connections for the outputs. Now for the dislikes. I would have preferred the output terminals be on the backside instead of the front. Oh yeah, almost forgot, the screws used for the fan, cosmetically, they are out of place. The screw heads are really big compared to what screw heads are being used on the rest of the case. A simple set of fan screws would have done nicely. As for its performance, it's quiet well, sorta. Being a ham radio operator, we gotta have supplies that don't generate noise. Every roughly 30 Kilohertz or so, it would generate what I would call a growling birdie. In between those birdies, it was nice and quiet. If you operate above 7.4 megs, you won't hear any birdies. They seem to disappear. I tuned around on my Kenwood, TS590S, up and through 6 meters almost up to 60 megahertz and no noise. If it had a noise offset control, this would be great. I started looking around for a better/quieter supply than the one I currently use. I actually had two radios connected at the same time. When I turned on the second radio, the birdies just got louder. So if Sound surround, the parent company for Pyle and Pyramid read this, I would make the following suggestions. 1. You want to save a buck or two, get rid of the 120V/240V switch. Just replace it with an internal jumper. Then you don't need to punch out the hole for the switch. In the US it's 120V anyway. So if you have to take the supply abroad, you just open it up, and remove one side of the jumper loop. It's not one of those settings that you would normally need to change. Besides with all of that RF floating around inside of the case, the less wire the better. 2. Add a noise offset control on the front. I noticed after it was on for awhile, the birdies didn't seem to drift around much. 3. Place the connectors on the back instead of the front. While you are at it, mount the connectors, Red on top, and Black on bottom. So all you would have on the front would be your on/off switch and the noise offset control. Final thoughts: This supply still has lots of potential. Sound surround engineers need to take this design and finish up the RF filtering. Of course if the filtering is good enough, you won't need that offset control. But if not then maybe add that noise offset control anyway. If that's done, I'll be happy to buy the supply. Ray