The only thing with mine is that it was missing Bank E. But after a simple email I got the bank and loaded it and its perfect. Real simple stuff that I easily overlooked because it was so fixable.
If you do have a problem, they will help you. Thats more than can be said for some other companies out there.
I had no problems with my LP Stage I, MoogerFoogers, or other stuff I’ve purchased from Moog. That includes the services provided. And tech support. When you e-mail them, they promptly respond. If there’s a problem, they’ll fix it…free of charge unless it was your fault. Even then, sometimes they won’t charge. Remember, these things are all built by hand in America. Where are you going to find anything else like that? Roland? Yamaha? Oh yeah…only 400 OS’s were/are being built. I agree that this should have been found at the factory, but sometimes things slip by. They are just a small company, after all. Glad everything worked out, though!
I bought a new Voyager and the LEDs around the Display didn’t work. But it was easy to fix: I opened it and found a loose jack which i plugged into the only free socket. Now it works perfectly!
I’ve owned a Phatty, 2 RMEs, a Performer and now an Old School. All of them were perfect right out of the box. I’ve owned synths from a variety of manufacturers and I’ve found Moog to have the best build quality (and support) out of all of them.
My only issue with Moog is that I keep wanting a new one every 6 months.
In all fairness I should mention that, aside from the minor flaws mine had, its electronics calibrating was flawless. And that, is the main important thing about an analog synthesizer.
Also, I realize that each one of the +/- 400 Old School produced is assembled by hand (with pride), by dedicated people. And I am confident that if I would have been unlucky enough to get a really defective unit, I would have had excellent support from Moog Music, no doubt.
So this poll is not intended to reflect badly on the company, it is just out of curiosity.
Out of curiosity, which music store did you buy from? I’ve had bad luck with non-Moog items from a couple different music stores. Scratches, dents, new prices, poor service etc.
I bought a new Voyager Performer from Sweetwater. It needed to have the keyboard scanner replaced inside of three days. The pitch bend wheel also kind of catches at the end of its travel when bending the note down. It doesn’t really catch, but you can feel it rub against something before it hits the stop. It’s not a biggy, but I do notice it.
Lately, I’ve noticed that if a note is playing when I plug in the work lamp, it slightly changes the sound of the note. I’m hoping this isn’t an indication of impending issues with the power supply, as the voltage drop of that lamp shouldn’t affect the sound at all, in my opinion. I guess time will tell.
I have exactly the same problem with the pitch bend wheel on my Old
School, although I find that not too problematic. Much more worrying is
that some keys wont trigger the envelopes and also the pitch stays the
same on those keys. You just have to press a wee bit harder on those
keys to get it done, but that can be very annoying when you play a slow
solo or something. I think Moog is doing everything they can to do it
right, but quality control should improve a bit I guess. I’m sure it will be
solved, I still have a full year of warranty. BTW, I have a Little Phatty
Tribute as well, and it also was not perfectly flawless (it still isn’t, but I’m
hoping with the new update it will). Nevertheless I’m still very happy with
both!
Haha, mine worked beautifully for the first 4 days I got it. Then, the keyboard scanner malfunctioned, and I couldn’t play it with the keyboard, and I couldn’t get the oscillators out of the low frequencies. What with me being unhandy with synth tech, I had to ship it back to Moog.
Ah…the Canadian version of Musician’s Friend. I’ve heard some bad things about them on the internets. Of course, whether or not the bad comments were justified, or some people just wanted to badmouth a music store is another matter.
When you say that the pitch stays the same on those keys, do you mean that you cannot bend the pitch on those keys using the pitch bend, or that the keys are all playing the same note in the same octave? Either way, you might want to call Moog tech support and discuss it with them. It sounds like your OS may need a little work.
The pitch stays the same in that octave (the pitch bend wheel does work
on those notes, but has the same pitch as the previously pressed note
that does work) and the envelope won’t trigger. But when you press
those certain “flawed” keys a bit harder, than it will trigger the envelopes
and the pitch will sound correctly. Some keys act worse than others.
Would that be a typical keyboard scanner problem you think? Or might it
be a misaligned keybed/keyboard (mechanical) problem?
I have a select series that has minor bubbling on the faceplate. It wasn’t bad enough for me to justify being without it long enough to be fixed or replaced. I don’t even notice it now unless I look for it. But, when I first took it out of the box, it was a blemish on an otherwise perfect instrument.
Are Voyagers supposed to have that gunky adhesive on the sides off the rocker switches? On all my switches (except the Release and Glide) there’s gummy stuff on the sides. I filed it off a few switched, though.
No, I don’t think so. The rocker switch sides on mine are exactly the same as the front of the switches. I don’t have any idea where that gunky adhesive is coming from?
The only thing I had to remove from my Old School was the clear plastic protectors from the center of the knobs.
I bought my EB through Steviejams on Ebay in summer 2005. It arrived double-boxed in flawless condition. I’m still using v2.5 but have the 3.xx/aftertouch upgrade here for… almost 18 months now…eek!!! Just haven’t wanted to mess with a good thing I guess.
I would like to send it in for a general tuneup and the filter glide mod and maybe the blinking wheels but I’m just not into sending my baby across the country twice.
It has developed some weird little digital gremlins; sometimes when adjusting the octave registers of the oscillators the screen flashes the wrong parameter or even another parameter altogether. But after jiggling the knob a bit it returns to the proper reading once again.
Overall I couldn’t be more pleased with the EB. In my mind it is the ultimate creation of Dr. Moog, combining the amazing creative power of his analog CV designs with 21st century digital memory and MIDI. Between the MoogerFoogers and the Voyager I think Moog has redefined the idea of a modular synth into something much more accessable than the originals back in the day but every bit as interactive and tweakable.