About
I love Star Trek (pre-2009). I love the Commodore 64 and Amiga. I am a 6502 Programmer working on C64 OS. I sell Star Trek stuff and Retro Computer stuff.
All feedback (166)
- hengxinyuan (166)- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseGreat communication. A pleasure to do business with.
- tndabone (1377)- Feedback left by buyer.Past yearVerified purchaseThank you for an easy, pleasant transaction. Excellent buyer. A++++++.
- zombiestoragehunters (592)- Feedback left by buyer.Past yearVerified purchaseHope to deal with you again. Thank you.
- jond5 (4103)- Feedback left by buyer.Past yearVerified purchaseThank you for an easy, pleasant transaction. Excellent buyer!
- brizzo-ca (8936)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
- player-home (253)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseThank you for an easy, pleasant transaction. Excellent buyer. A++++++.
Reviews (5)

Apr 06, 2017
Just what I ordered.
Exactly as described. Just what I ordered. This is a used product, so I don't know how many they'll have, but it is exactly what I wanted.

Jan 02, 2019
Exactly as described, does the job.
The terminal blocks themselves are a bit taller than I would have hoped, but they're solid. The PCB also has 3 holes allowing it to be easily screw mounted to a would surface. It does exactly what I need.

Nov 01, 2017
Good quality sound, lacking quality elsewhere
You'd think for an audio amplifier that the sound quality and loudness would be all that count. If that's all that count for you, then this device cannot be beat. It's super cheap, super small, easily embeddable into projects of various description, and produces surprisingly loud, clear and undistorted sound.
I had two main problems with it. The terminal blocks are quite cheap and easy to break. While screwing down the terminals you are putting rotational stress on a round peg in a round hole. On my first try tightening one of the power input terminals, the solder joint on the terminal pin broke. This made the terminal block super loose. But worse, it would not stay reliably powered up. When I eventually figured out what had happened I had to resolder that joint. After that, it worked fine.
This next comment is maybe not a problem for everyone. But, to me, the front facing audio jack is completely inopportune. I wanted the amplifier for amplifying an internal audio source. I mounted the board such that the volume knob passes through a custom from plate. But then, the only audio input is now flush with the front face. I would have much preferred if board had another terminal block for audio input. As it is, I unsoldered the jack and added in three wires that run up and back from the board. Then resoldered the jack to those wires. But, maybe for some use cases the jack is exactly where you would want it.