...the Quickie is a design that almost didn't go into production...
Oh, come on, Doc. It's a great kit for so many reasons:
1. No power cord, and it's small and light. When you want to work on it, just unplug the inputs and output, flip it over in its chassis and go. It takes seconds.
2. No high voltage, inexpensive tubes. It allows you to try quick tweaks without fear you're going to weld an expensive part.
3. Battery power. When you try something, you can just see what it does in the audio circuit, without always double-thinking whether you need to mod the PS. And it's not at the phono stage level, so battery (chemical) noise is a non-issue.
4. Plastic top. No drill press, no metal chips in the circuit, no punches. I just look at where I want a hole and use a slow cordless drill to put it there. I just do it by eye. I don't even measure. And it ends up looking like stock.
There have got to be a lot of reasons I missed. This is the ultimate beginner's kit: easy, low voltage, huge improvement in sound over what's out there, portable, low voltage, clean PS already supplied, etc., etc. And I'm always a beginner. (For example, I didn't know you could get good sound with a 5 dollar output transformer). It's so easy to mod it's like a perfboard kit. It adds a lot of understanding, so when one mods a Foreplay or phono stage, there is more knowledge behind that mod. I think it makes the whole process more efficient. I'm glad you got it to market. It's let me do things with my system that I couldn't do before.
I hope others develop this platform, to see how far it can go.