And repairs are possible on computers as well, the problem with Synths is that many of them use weird custom parts that are unobtainable. Ask owners of the Alesis Andromeda about how easy it is to find parts for examplepsycho45039 wrote: Sun Mar 02, 2025 12:15 amRepairs are possible, usually the only thing that goes wrong are the electrolytic capacitors age out. That is something typical in all electronic devices. Besides turning real knobs on real hardware is much more enjoyable than mousing around. Here's a picture my current setup.IvyBirds wrote: Fri Feb 28, 2025 5:21 pmMy closet of broken hardware Synths that just stopped working one day would like a wordpsycho45039 wrote: Fri Feb 28, 2025 1:10 pm An even bigger thing not mentioned here is the developer discontinues the virtual intrument/effect. So even if you have older hardware capable of running it, you can't. An example I'll give is I kept an old Power Mac G5 around to run NI Kore 2, Vokator and Spektral Delay. I still have the machine and I still own the software but 2 years ago I lost the system drive and didn't have a back up of it and now I can't reauthorize the software to use it. Since then I've been buying hardware synths and rarely if ever use a software instrument. I refuse to spend time and/or money on something that at any moment I won't be able to use.
Hardware synths can and do break all the time, which is why I use software
I refuse to spend time anor money on something that at any moment I won't be able to use
My broken JP-8000 has no output. I replaced the OP Amps, and all the Capacitors. It still has no output. That is a very common issue. What do I next? Should I spend even more time and money randomly replacing parts? What if I replace everything but the custom Roland ICs? Where do I get them?
Computer parts are much simpler and easier to aquire than many synth parts.
Beyond that however is the fact that just like with hardware I often lose interest in a synth after a few years and want to move on
With hardware that often meant selling for a loss, especially when you factor in PayPal and eBay/reverb fees. With software that means I also lose a little bit of money if I can't sell it off. Over the years however I have lost far more money on reselling hardware or having hardware break than I ever have on software
