



You could have had Pangolin FB3-QS for that! Would have been worth the extra by the sounds of it.
Although I'm not an electronics expert, by any means, I fail to see how the laser could be responsible for claimed DAC voltage damage anyway.
Isn't voltage set by the electronics?
I understood voltage was fixed by the resistors in an electronic device and that the only variable was that an appliance can draw the current it needs but at the fixed voltage. So whereas you can burn an appliance out by drawing over current, you shouldn't be able to burn something out by drawing over voltage because you can't actually draw more volts than is available (you can input into something more volts than it wants but you can't draw out more volts than the source (DAC in this case) can supply).
So if it was over voltage on output, surely its the DAC thats been factory set over voltage not the laser as the laser can draw more current but can't draw out of the DAC more than the set voltage. The only way you could damage the DAC by voltage therefore surely would be to connect its input to an over voltage supply but that isn't what is claimed though is it, as isn't the damage to the output stage?
Sounds like an excuse to me for a faulty product that they don't want to replace.