

🎸 Power up your tone with zero noise and endless expansion!
The Truetone 1 SPOT Pro CS12 is a professional-grade guitar pedal power supply featuring 12 fully isolated and regulated outputs with variable voltages (9Vac, 9Vdc, 12V, 18V). It supports a total current capacity of 3000mA, ensuring reliable power for large pedalboards. Designed with a lightweight switching power supply and universal input voltage (100-240V AC), it offers worldwide compatibility. Its durable metal chassis with vented sides and included Pedaltrain-compatible mounting brackets make it a perfect, quiet, and efficient studio or stage solution backed by a 5-year warranty.






| ASIN | B012F2ALAE |
| Best Sellers Rank | #17,932 in Musical Instruments ( See Top 100 in Musical Instruments ) #102 in Guitar & Bass Pedal Boards & Cases |
| Color Name | black |
| Connector Type | Barrel Connector |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (673) |
| Date First Available | July 24, 2015 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 2 pounds |
| Item model number | CS12USJ |
| Material Type | Metal |
| Output Wattage | 54 Watts |
| Product Dimensions | 10 x 10 x 2 inches |
| Voltage | 18 Volts, 9 Volts |
C**.
Awesome power supply, more current than I'l ever need.. very quiet and reliable
Awesome power supply, with more than enough current to feed even the largest pedalboards. Most other power supplies in this price range have either much fewer power outlets, or not enough current. The more popular Voodoo Pedal Power 2+ only has two 250mA outputs, which is not enough power to feed all the new current-hungry digital pedals out there. The CS12 has two 250mA and two 500mA outputs (both 9v DC) which is really great. They also say in the manual, that you can pull more than the stated current from a given output, as long as the total current needed by all your pedals doesn't exceed the maximum output of the CS12 (3000mA). So you could use one of the 100mA outputs to power a 200mA pedal, for example. This is very cool, and I don't think any other supplies are capable of this (or at least they don't advertise it). This is also a very quiet supply, truly isolated and very reliable. I'm very glad I went with the CS12. I actually have a lot of pedals on my board at the moment, so I have daisy-chained a few of my low-current analog distortion pedals off of one output. Since those pedals usually need less than 20mA, you can run a few of them off one of the 100mA outputs if you get a daisy-chain power cable. Then I have each of my high-power digital pedals on their own output, because those are the ones that make the most noise so you want them to be isolated. Overall I'm very happy with the CS12, and highly recommend it to anyone who is looking to power more than a few pedals. If you don't need so much power, the smaller CS7 is also a great option.
A**R
Works Great!
Works great for my needs. I'm a beginner, figuring it out on my own for the past few years and this power source is perfect for me. I have more than enough power for the pedals I currently own and this has plenty of room for me to expand with additional pedals. Also fits perfectly under my Pedaltrain Classic Jr. pedalboard. No noise, buzz or hiss from this unit either. For the price, I don't think you can go wrong unless you get a faulty unit. Hope this helps others like me when looking for a power supply that doesn't cost a fortune.
J**U
Outstanding!!
Phenomenal. I have 11 basic Boss pedals, and as a "newbie" I was concerned this couldn't power all 11 due to all the different settings and output labels. I went through an education. First, no such thing as too much power. More power is better than not enough, and you can't hurt your pedals that only need 100ma with a 500ma output from the CS12. In addition, Trutone sells an adapter that you can use for the two 18v 100ma outputs to convert them to 9v. This made it possible for me to power 11 basic pedals without hurting anything. My previous pedals were daisy-chained together, and I can't tell you how much better they sound with the CS12. All the noise is gone, and the pedals seem to have more "range." In addition, they supply the perfect cables with perfect length. When I was done wiring 11 pedals, I didn't even need a zip tie underneath my pedal board. It's like they know exactly how long that cable needs to be to reach that far. Great support from Trutone. They answered my questions via email very promptly and gave me the necessary education that led me to make the purchase. Can't say enough good things!
M**T
Does it all and is super versatile. Includes cables and has brackets for pedaltrain 2 big board
First off I was looking for awhile, and ended up on this. I’m a big fan of TrueTone already, and have some VisualSound pedals. You can see me Jekyl and Hyde V1 in picture! One thing you should know is volts matter most here, with not hurting your pedals! The Ma is not as big a deal outside digital pedals. Most analog pedals can be 5ma to 40ma lots of times. So with the base 9v 100ma slots if you wanted, you could daisy chain 2-4 pedals of that or same on the 9v 250ma. So 9v 200ma effects pedal, is fine on the 9v 250ma+. There you won’t want to daisy chain at all. Mostly you’ll have a little MA left over and that’s a good thing! The pedal will take only what’s needed, and having a little overhead does not hurt! The two 18v are 100ma, but I’m finding a lot of my 18v pedals are running 5-7ma pretty much anyways. So I was able to hook all my pedals up, and still have room for a few more. I did not use the red cable supplied with pack….some kept saying it’s for the DC output…but I’m not sure as it looks like length to me and fit before I powered it on to my 18v. I only wanted to use it on my 18v to show red for my eyes. But better safe than sorry, so I used one of the others. Mostly with the cables the color coding is length here, and then you have a bunch of adaptors. The DOD type adapters you know what to do. But the rest of the “adaptor” cables, I wouldn’t use unless you read up about what each one is for. Most are for the Whammy or odd ball drop effects. They are not just extender cables. The Blue and Purple are long enough for pedals up front or in the way back I found. White and Yellow length great for all middle pedals. So the basic white, yellow, purple and blue are just length. Just look to see if you have a normal 9v analog pedal, and most 99% will work on the 9v 100ma and it’s more MA than you need anyway. So you could daisy chain i mentioned if need be. As most analog are under 100ma and 250ma. I found my digital reverb and delays were mostly 200-500 ma 9v, so this is where you need to look at your pedals more closely. Digital usually need more MA to operate…so just get it in the proper range…you’ll most likely have a small amount of overhead. As far as the 9v sag one..I just use it normal. But I’m sure this would be good for a Germanium Fuzz pedal, to simulate an old battery! I usually just run a battery in my fuzz anyway, because I like the sound. But it is cool you have this feature. The knob isn’t loose that’ll go down or anything. I’m powering a germanium treble boosters at 9v…but may put my Foxxy Tone here for optional Sag. If you feel weird about the sag knob you can always put tape over it. So it’s pretty straight forward and easy to use! Cable colors are length, red colors stay away unless you have a device that needs this…..most won’t. Use the DOD adapters if you have some of those pedals. And remember most 9v analog are way under 100ma, and digital like Strymon and Source Audio will be your 9v 250-500 ma area. The pedals will only pull what they need on the MA side. The 18v are mostly on amp in a box type pedals, and some JHS ones I ran into. Don’t run 18v unless marked…but if it can it gives more headroom and sounds bigger. Like a amp in a box from 50w to 100w sound. Follow these basic rules, and you’ll be setup in a few minutes! Just make sure to trace your cables, or mark them…especially 18v or DC! If only using 9v just tape down the sag if you want.
M**N
I've been considering buying a unit like this for years and finally did. I have my setup in a basement with fluorescent lighting and a sump pump with a battery backup that both create noise in my already noisy high gain 2 amp setup. Add to that my pedalboard with a Digitech Whammy and other notoriously screechy pedals and it was to the point that I didn't enjoy using my full rig anymore. The CS12 had enough mixed power jacks for everything. My TC Electronics Flashback X4 delay and the Digitech Drop pedal both use around 250-300mA and the MXR KFK EQ runs on 18 volts. The Digitech Whammy 4 works perfectly with the 800mA AC jack and now I don't need a separate bypass for it. Then there are a bunch of jacks for anything under 100mA like wah, overdrive, tuner, noise gate or whatever else I want to plug in there. This unit was fairly expensive but the cheap ones don't have the AC output for the whammy, which is the biggest troublemaker in my setup. This eliminated 3 different power adaptors, a daisy chain, a power bar extension cord and 99% of the noise from my board. I can barely tell the amp is on now until I play a note.
E**!
Una fuente de muy muy buena calidad, todo lo que necesitas en los escenarios y sin temor a cortos, fallas de voltaje etc. sin dudas todos debemos tenerla 🤘🏼
J**N
Muy buen producto cumple con las espectativas e inclusive más de ellas ayudo a reducir los ruidos
A**Z
Everything needed to set the one spot up was included. Fit perfectly under my pedalboard and got rid of most of my pedal noise! Fantastic product!
H**Z
Con esta power supply tendrás la seguridad que de que tus pedales estén correctamente alimentados y sonaran como deben ser por sus salidas aisladas, ya tengo rato usándola y si note bastante mejor el sonido que con una barata.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
4 days ago