Gear For Sale

Inbox with Battery and Power Cord
Modified to add coax output pigtail. This is similar to the modified pigtail some people have on their Sony SBM-1, it’s a coax plug instead of a 7-pin plug. It is soldered right to the 1/8” socket inside the Inbox, strain relieved and grommeted. Has worked flawlessly for me with my D7 for several years/many shows. The original 1/8” digital socket and Toslink output are both still fully functional and I have used both. I power this using a Radio Shack 9.6 volt RC battery. The Inbox has a 1/8” socket for power. I built a cable with a female RC connector on one end and a 1/8” on the other. I will include this. You can easily get well over 8 hours run time off one of these batteries.
Denecke PS-1's with Battery
Modified to power from 9.6-volt RC NiMH battery. I got tired real quick of first buying Alkaline and then recharging/swapping 9 volt rechargeable batteries. Since I power the Inbox with a 9.6 volt RC NiMH, for commonality, I wired these two together off a single 9.6 volt. They, unfortunately, did not come with the 1/8” power sockets the Inbox (and PS-1a’s) come with. So I drilled holes in the cases just next to the low battery light and ran the power cable in there. This way all the cables come in/out one end of the box. The 9 volt battery slots are still functional. As wired, a 9-volt in one PS-1 will power both of them. These can easily be separated. The two PS-1’s will run for around 5 hours off one 9.6-volt pack.
Batteries and Charger
I have used Radio Shack batteries and chargers for quite some time now. They have served me well. Until recently I was using NiCd’s. When they died*, I replaced them with NiMH and a new RS charger (the old one only charged NiCd). I will sell these as part of the package as well. The batteries are quite new. One has around 10 uses and the other around 5.

*They never died on me while taping. When I put them in the charger, the charger would blink and not charge the pack. I thought that was pretty nice of the charger to let me know when it was time to get new batteries. The first time it happened I was in disbelief. When the less-old battery did the same thing a few months later, I knew this was supposed to happen.
Close Up of Coax Pig Tail
alans12@comcast.net