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dookerJ
Reviewed in the United States on June 20, 2024
I had this about one week before I blew out one third of the board. I may have connected a cable backwards or something but I heard a pop and modules stopped working. I just had to throw it away. Behringer makes some cool stuff for the money but this is too cheap for a power supply
Jebbers
Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2024
I’ve seen a number of confused reviews, and had a number of questions myself when ordering. I’ve tried to cover all of the questions that I had in detail, as well as point out a couple incorrect statements in reviews.In short;PROS: huge, good amount of power & slide nutsCONS: behringer ethics, flexible plastic, gaps, short cable, requires planningPOWER: The PSU is split into 3 zones. Each zone itself gets 1A maximum for +12V, and the case as a whole gets 1A maximum for -12V and 5V.I planned my case on modular grid so that each power zone would end up at about 800mA +12V, and ~300mA for -12V. This task was very simple when using modular grid.In the case of mounting Behringer’s own synth clones (Model D, K2, Pro-1 etc) these will eat up the power for an entire zone. I don’t personally see the point in racking them in this style case rather than stacking them in the enclosure they come in, but to each their own. The cable from the power adapter is too short. Simply too short. The brick must be directly behind the case. If you are stacking cases, I’d imagine you must find some way to support the adapter brick behind the top case, as it will not reach any surface below.DEPTH:There’s quite a variation in maximum depth across the case. There is a page of the manual that diagrams each area. Again, using modular grid, it is very simple to organize your modules. Do your homework before assuming you can stick a 50mm deep module anywhere in the case.MATERIAL:The plastic decently sturdy, however flexes a bit. When mounting modules, i suggest starting with corners and working in. I mounted left->right, which resulted in a very slight warp in the plastic. Very slight, but might bother you.NUTS:There are really a lot of slide nuts in the rails. Personally, i love having all corners of my modules mounted for aesthetics. I happened to have some extra nuts from previous racks, so i plan to add them. It’s as simple as unscrewing the rails and sliding them in. Pics are attached for others who obsess over insignificant details.I like sliding nuts for the ability to perfectly line modules up next to each other. Some manufacturers have slight variances, so sometimes threaded strips don’t line up in a pleasing fashion.These rails are more like 141hp. You won’t be able to use that 1hp, but it’ll leave a small gap. This drives me nuts, hence the 4 stars. Sorry. I can’t not look at the gaps. I spaced my lump of modules in the center to allow for minimal, symmetrical gaps on each side of the case. Pics attached.STACKING:Behringer announced a set of brackets to stack multiple cases ( just like the mantis of which they cloned) however these seem to have not been released. I’ve seen several photos of people using Mantis brackets, and they reportedly line up exactly the same.COVERING/PORTABILITY:There appears to be a decksaver lid for the case, but personally it’s not appeaking. It would be neat if Behringer released either a matching cover or a travel-focused case with lid. They also will not fit in a Mantis’ go-bag, as they are significantly longer. If this is an issue, realistically, maybe just go for a Mantis. I think these are too large and heavy when filled to transport easily anywho. I currently use a cheap unused makeup brush from my wife to safely dust off my modules.I will update my review in time if any issues arise, but for the price I found it to be a no-brainer. I planned on getting Mantis cases, as I appreciate TipTop and would like to support them, but the value of these I just couldn’t pass up.
Diana Wiegand
Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2023
Good value for the size, but be aware it is a) relatively thin plastic case and b) underpowered with only 1 amp TOTAL at -12V (+12V is 2 amps). It is a chronic problem in modular, that needed -12V power is neglected in favor of rarely-used 5V bus. One other thing to note is the rails have slide nuts (commented on in other reviews) and the rails between the top and bottom rows are tight on top of each other, limiting what hardware you can use and making those screws hard to get in and out.
Gun Magnet
Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2022
Nice case, sliding nuts are a bummer vs full inserts. 3 separate 1a boards clean power up to 3x800ma modules allowing 20% headroom for best practice. Just fired it up after calculating loads per bus. Now getting the sliding nuts to all be in the right spots is a pain. Threaded inserts are far preferable, they allow swapping modules easily, without having to remove adjacent modules. Sliding nuts are wack.Decksaver make a lid and it fits with patch cables in. It would be great if this unit was built with a latching lid. But price to power to HP the go is a solid bet.
通りすがりのレビューア
Reviewed in Japan on June 1, 2021
このEURORACK GO 1台でSYSTEM35相当のユニットを搭載しています。右端の下段に、MIDIからCV+Gateコンバータを搭載しています。なお、Gateはそのままでは911エンベロープジェネレータに入れられないので、V-in_S-outなアダプタを作成して搭載してます(961 INTERFACEを使わず994 MULTIPLESを改造)。960 SEQUENTIAL CONTROLLERを搭載したラック1つを足して、2台でSYSTEM 55を超えてSYSTEM IIIcにほぼ近い(ミキサーのみ含まれない)構成となりました。見て頂ければ判ると思いますが、960は本当に幅が大きいです。960を1台なら104HPでも行けますが、2台横並びにしたい場合はこの140HPがよろしいと思います。価格と搭載できるモジュール数からすると、この箱はお買い得と思います。
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