I have been lacking in posting on this forum (very busy) and you might be able to tell I am cleaning up my unread posts here... I do not like being this busy... sorry but I don't. It is good to be busy but.......
WHATEVER!
I would have said one word... v-pot... I think optimum at 17volts (schee-nabs say 16???) I remember 17volts this is just stuck in my head. Count them up, as any good engineer will tell you calculate at full load there are your watts... easy stuff Watson...
I am not so sure about the actual fader motor voltage, the control voltage may be the 16/17v as Joe suggests.
If you can count you will know the required load of the 16/17 volt transformer - the main thing is that it remains consistent - it needs to be stable. As the load increases (think automation) it can not have any drop. Fortunately, the load can not be that great and there may be an allowable (acceptable) amount of drop (I say nope). In fact, this might be a non-issue, but it did cross my mind - as I also do these sorts of calcs in custom applications with various bits of gear quite often, not everyday, but it is one of my jobs. It is not foreign to me.
It would actually be easy to build one, expensive but easy. And better yet they could be a source for this type of voltage with the requirements needed, but honestly I have been around the block and I am not holding my breath on this one until we find it. Ground up is the way to go on this IMO, and it can be tailored to fit inside the box this way. Equally easy is a smart switch that would sense power at the new power supply so you could run the d8b as a d8b and leave the BFC connected! As soon as the new power supply power cycles, it hits the contact point that disables all power from the Mackie CPU - this way you have both - brilliant!!!
And simple to do.
I count 33 v-pots and 25 faders - in a couple of weeks I can spec this out, but you guys will already have one built by then, I will check the thread so I don't waste my time.
@Marc... maybe at this point it is a good idea to get v1.0 out. It does not need to be perfectly packaged and completely saleable. This will allow some much needed cash flow to you and also get you motivated to make those improvements. No one is getting v1.1 until they pay more money- this is how buy and sell works, and as much Internet activity you have had here and at gearslutz and who know where else, including the YouTube stuff… believe me I am telling the truth, there are many more who have not heard of this yet, so there is a market guy or a buyout in your future.
Michael