// HARDWARE · 2025-10-30

Conduit PDX-1 - Quiet USB-C Power for Eurorack

Building a USB-C powered Eurorack supply that doesn't sound like a swarm of bees - and iterating toward something actually shippable.

I’ve been iterating on the Conduit PDX for a while now. There aren’t many USB-to-Eurorack solutions out there that actually deliver enough power without sounding like a swarm of bees, so I decided to build my own.

The first prototypes (the ones I posted on Instagram back in October) were a good start, but I’ve already moved on to the next iteration: the Conduit PDX-2.

I’ve just finished the PCB layout for V2. The most significant change is that I’ve dropped the +5V rail entirely. Most modern modules don’t even use it, and for the ones that do, I’m thinking about a separate, tiny bus adapter project to introduce it back onto the bus if required. Dropping it let me focus all the board space on the +/-12V rails and some diagnostic features I’ve been wanting.

The new design is a 4HP “Reactor Core.” I’ve added a dual analog current visualizer on the front panel-two 5-segment bar graphs driven by zero-latency analog logic. It gives you instant feedback on your power draw and transient spikes. It’s got that sci-fi industrial aesthetic I love: matte black PCB faceplate with exposed gold circuitry.

Under the hood, it’s still all about audio-grade silence. I’m using a 2.2 MHz switching architecture to keep any whine far above the audible range, paired with a multi-stage Pi-filter topology. It’s designed to deliver 3.0A on the +12V rail and 1.5A on the -12V, which is plenty of juice for a high-density travel case.

The layouts are done, and I’m about to pull the trigger on the PCB order.

// THE HARDWARE Conduit PDX-2 A 4HP USB-C Power Delivery supply that runs a whole Eurorack case from a laptop charger: 3A on +12V, 2.2MHz switching, studio-grade silence.
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