Where can I buy tattoo power supplies and accessories in Canada?
Maple Tattoo Supply stocks the complete range of professional tattoo power supplies and accessories in Canada — wireless batteries, wired digital units, foot switches, clip cords, RCA cables, and adapters — from Critical, FK Irons, Cheyenne, Bishop, Darklab, EZ, and ALP. Everything ships fast from our Toronto warehouse across Canada, priced in CAD with no surprise fees at the border.
What's the difference between a clip cord and an RCA cable?
A clip cord is the traditional connection — it has two pronged clips that attach to the binding posts on a coil tattoo machine, and a plug that goes into the power supply. An RCA cable uses a standard RCA jack (the same connector style as audio equipment) and plugs directly into the machine's RCA port — the modern standard for almost all rotary and pen-style machines. Most cartridge pens and modern rotaries use RCA; most traditional coil machines use clip cord. Some machines support both with an adapter.
Do I need a foot switch for my tattoo machine?
For wired and most wireless setups, yes — a foot switch is what triggers the machine. Classic designs like the 360° Round Star and Round Heavy Duty Metal Foot Switch are the studio standards. Wireless options like the Ez Wireless Foot Switch and Critical Connect free you from the cord entirely. Some all-in-one wireless battery packs (like certain Critical Connect and FK Irons setups) offer a touch or continuous-run mode that doesn't strictly need a pedal — but most working artists still prefer one for finer control over starting and stopping.
How do I connect a clip cord or RCA cable to my tattoo machine?
For an RCA cable: plug one end into your power supply, the other into the matching RCA jack on your tattoo machine. For a clip cord: plug the round connector into your power supply, then attach the two metal clips to the binding posts on your coil machine — make sure the clips have firm contact for steady voltage. With either setup, plug in your foot switch (or activate your wireless one), set your voltage to the machine's recommended starting range, and test on a practice skin before working on a client.
Wireless or wired foot switch — which is better?
Both work — it comes down to your setup and how you like to work. Wireless foot switches (Ez Wireless, Critical Connect) eliminate cord tangles and pair well with wireless battery packs for a fully cord-free station — ideal for conventions, guest spots, and tight workspaces. Wired foot switches like the 360° Round Star give you zero battery management and a slightly more reliable trigger over long sessions. Many working artists keep a backup wired pedal even if their main setup is wireless.