A
Anonymous
Guest
Well, the situation is this....Sterling buy a product designed and made by a third party. The designers decided that user programming was desirable to accommodate batteries of different types around the world. Some of us build up from 2V cells, 6V or 12V batteries, and of widely different types. Also, the usage can vary enormously.
So Sterling buy this product, badge it and inhibit this programmability. Not a good start, in my opinion, but why do they leave reference to programming in the manual??? Then refuse to discuss it when anyone asks why it doesn't seem to be working?
There is no excuse. It is pretty poor stuff.
So Sterling buy this product, badge it and inhibit this programmability. Not a good start, in my opinion, but why do they leave reference to programming in the manual??? Then refuse to discuss it when anyone asks why it doesn't seem to be working?
There is no excuse. It is pretty poor stuff.