I bet the folks at Production Advantage don't *actually* stock that adapter.
It reminds me of another adapter that I saw, that was incredibly show-specific; it was an Edison to Speakon adapter. In the course of a show (I forget which production), one of the characters needed to plug a boom box into a wall outlet and turn it on. The sound designer and production manager opted to build the Edison-to-Speakon connector, so rather than plug it into wall power, it was actually plugging into an aux send from the audio console. Definitely one of those "make sure everyone knows, and destroy everything after the show" set ups.
But Speakon is actually rated for 120V; I don't think 1/4" plugs are.
Don't a lot of LED fixtures use speakon Edison adapters to get power and daisy chain between fixtures?I bet the folks at Production Advantage don't *actually* stock that adapter.
It reminds me of another adapter that I saw, that was incredibly show-specific; it was an Edison to Speakon adapter. In the course of a show (I forget which production), one of the characters needed to plug a boom box into a wall outlet and turn it on. The sound designer and production manager opted to build the Edison-to-Speakon connector, so rather than plug it into wall power, it was actually plugging into an aux send from the audio console. Definitely one of those "make sure everyone knows, and destroy everything after the show" set ups.
But Speakon is actually rated for 120V; I don't think 1/4" plugs are.
Don't a lot of LED fixtures use speakon Edison adapters to get power and daisy chain between fixtures?
It is probably used with some http://www.darklightsystem.com/ thing. They have a bit of experience with sketchy connector use.
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