"I buy a stock PS brick, chop off the cable and add the necessary caps and resistors to make it function."
Why do this if you can purchase a new cable?
Why do this if you can purchase a new cable?
Mac Mini Power Supply
It's cheaper than buying the cable from MP3car most times. And I build my cables into a Powercon for my power supplies so I'd have to chop things up a bit anyway. Unfortunately it bricks the brick to do this so it's a bit of a waste, but there aren't many cost effective alternatives for older Mac Minis. |
I wasn't able to find a cheap power brick for my Mini, so I bought the MP3car cable. It works fine. There is more than one wiring diagram around for the connector. The right configuration has the iSense cable running to ground through a 3.3K resistor. A quarter-watt one is fine. There are a good many aftermarket power supplies around, or were. I chose a 2009 Mini as being the most recent model that still had an external PS. Easier to work on, adequate for the purpose, and probably easier to resell/reuse too. I did all the software tweaks, maxed the RAM, put in an SSD and found a linear PS for the (external, FireWire 800) music drive. That PS was a 12V Acopian Gold Box model from eBay. Finding a power supply for the Mini was hard. I didn't want to pay a lot because I had no proof it would really make a difference, aside from the small improvement in clarity and coherence I got when I upgraded the hard drive's PS. Eventually I found an 18V Acopian Gold Box A with +/- 0.5V adjustable output voltage, at a price I was willing to pay. It was an older unit but Acopian worked very kindly with me to get it running. It needed new filter caps. These were not hard to find. My total cost was under $150 and the improvement was, IMO, worth while. Timbres are sweeter, highs are cleaner and the music seems more coherent. |
@ 4hannons, sorry for slow response. The Acopian model I happened across on eBay was A18H1400. That's a Gold Box Type A linear regulated supply rated at 14 amps output. 14 amps of current is somewhat more than the stock Mini power supply's output, which is nominally 10 amps. Message board posts seem to indicate 8.5 amps is quite sufficient. However it's best to keep in mind that some extra power is needed to feed the USB and Firewire buses, so if you power a drive or a DAC from the Mini, you will definitely need headroom. Acopian model number A15H1150 is definitely big enough. This one is specified as a 15-volt supply; the idea is to require your unit be built to output 18 volts, when you place your order. Acopian has been really great to deal with, in my experience. |