Man, please just stop commenting, you are spreading misinformation.
Maybe you are not completely clueless about electrotechnics but this statement is. If even 10% of power available from good power supply ended up in electrodes this thread would have no users (most would not be dead but would have no interest in estim ever again). If you really believe what you write here, then you should really get battery power for your amplifier, because your wall socket probably can supply more than 3kW of power and you are connecting power supply to it, so it must all go through, right?
I feel it is completely pointless to try to explain what happens with power supplied to amplifier, what is its output, and even from there - because output stage of stim box were very well described in earlier posts, roles of serial and parallel resistors etc... It all respects Ohm's law but you have to understand and apply it to each of those subcircuits. And yes, without parallel resistor it is possible to push more than 10% of available power to transformer, but we all have volume knob and we use it. Most of us also have parallel resistor which together with losses in transformer consumes almost all of the output power of amplifier (and provided power from supply), electrodes receiving only very small fraction of it, by design (because like that output power depends on static components, not on conductivity and area of electrode contacts). Having more power than needed just means less distortion, it does not mean that all of it HAVE to be used. Just like having 200HP engine in car does not mean you always have to be accelerating.
And BTW, I personally use that exact model of Leicke 24V power supply linked by @lolol2, not because it can provide 120W, but because it is double insulated (represented by two boxes one inside of each other on sticker on its back).
The linked one for 12V does not have it, but who wants to use 12V,
this one does and 3A should be enough for estim (if you don't have speakers you connect to amplifier when not stimming)
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ok, once again, but then I definitely stop. Of course there don't flow 18 watts into the electrodes (because of the resistors, transformers). I am not stupid. There is a body current-calculation-sheet (I think from Tronic), perhaps you know that sheet.
Power from Amplifier - body current (with typical stereostim setup)
10w - 30mA
20w - 42,9mA
50w - 67,9mA
A body current over 50mA could be dangerous. And why risk that?
Sorry, but I think you are spreading misinformation.