In case you havent figured it out, As far as I know, the 100mA dc jacks are isolated from the 500mA, So you have to comnect all your analog pedals using the 100mA jacks and Digital pedals go into the 500mA 9v jacks. 100mA jack row are NOT isolated from each other, nor the 500mA.
@@jasonbrianmerrill update: The power supply arrived a week after I posted the comment, long story short, not isolated as some people on forums said but pretty good cheap psu ,no issues and no weird noises so far (boss, digitech, behringer, analog/digital stompboxes)
It is NOT “false advertisement”: The positive terminals are isolated. The negative terminals seem to be “isolated” in other, higher-end power supplies. But the difference is immaterial, because inside each pedal the negative terminals are connected to the ground side of the guitar sockets, and these in turn are connected to each other though each patch cable. Therefore the negative terminals BECOME connected as soon as you plug one pedal to another. Therefore the whole issue makes no difference. Mute point.
I mean, it might not be false advertisement in a literal sense, but that is kinda how false advertisement works, no? It's more in a practical sense. If you look at isolated power supplies, this is not how it works.
it works just fine with the one spot - and this has nothing to do with draw. No matter what, this is a sign of a non-isolated power supply and is false advertising. I do hear you though, and I realize it's a bit of a tall order.
I just plugged my Boss RC-500 Looper and had noise. I then looked up its drawing 330mA. Moved it to the 500mA slot and worked fine with no hum. Something to keep in mind. Believe me mA draw is a little more important than you think.