If you mean that it takes time, sure. I wouldn't go so far as to say that it "pushes you even further away from anything music related" though. Modular is intrinsically technical and building gear has something of a symbiotic relationship with using it up to a point. Pieburger is obviously committed to DIY, and I used to be more that way, but, it does slow things down. That can be good or bad, depending on your perspective. I now allow DIY to supplement commercially built modules.Stefken wrote: Tue Feb 14, 2023 10:57 am Impressive this DIY stuff.
Unfortunately, i am not a DIY guy and i guess this becomes a technical world/rabbit hole all on its own, which pushes you even further away from anything music related. At that point you are pretty much an engineer, right..
Impressive, but i won t be going that route.
I also think that you can be slightly less committed than Pieburger with building and still be successful. I think that you can easily build DIY through-hole kits with about $100 worth of tools. You don't really need a scope, but you do need, at minimum, a multimeter. Sometimes this makes for a dramatic difference. The Befaco Lich is nearly $400 assembled but under $200 in kit form.
To be clear, I don't think that DIY is for most people. It's not because most people aren't capable, they are, but because it is "something else" and it does have a learning curve, and also a stress factor. I have a module that I built about two years ago and only just now powered it up. It doesn't work, I remember not testing it at the time for reasons, now it's back to the bench to figure out what I missed.