power supply go bye bye, it crossed me for the last time. there is something stupid about the design making it overly sensitive, anyway I binned it and replaced with HP, good riddens.
highly do not recommend you buy.. pads started coming off after god knows how many transistor replacements and I decided its a thorn in my side and a waste of my time, a totally disproportionate amount of time was wasted on keeping it in service
Hp is
1) lower price
2) same parameters
3) non crappy display
4) 10x more robust housing
5) serviceable without a hardwired transformer to the PCB making rework a nightmare, not to mention with magnet wire, you would need to build an entire stabilization assembly and glue it to the transformer to make crimp connectors viable after splicing on real wires. if you put a transformer on the PCB put the transformer on the PCB, don't put the transformer on a separate plane with fragile wiring not attached to the pcb. you wanna justify this give me 10nv noise not the same noise as stuff 20 years younger. i don't see any improvements over old supplies. they are kind enough to put varnish soaked non flexible insulation over the wires that ensure they break
6) better potentiometers, crowbar, etc.. actually feels moderately durable instead of the usual pcb in front panel with trimmer, they actually give you a nice brass screw
7) does not break from the electronic equivalent of a sneeze

no MTA garbage connectors
9) has nice screw terminals for remote operation, making it rapidly usable with a wiring kit rather then making you fuck around making dsub shit
10) you can pull the cover off without playing games with a clam shell metal design. screeches like a pterodactyl being eaten alive when you wanna take the cover off. the front panel is held on by a PCB that the metal housing literary wraps around, its totally floating.
someone tried to make a good thing cheap and it came out like a scam, I feel like I am doing heart surgery on a turkey working on these shoe boxes

It was probobly gonna go to 80V output again because it suffered from a 100mA inrush current into a $500 PCB anyway.