I’ve been peeking at least once a week for the last 15 years
Here is one currently on ebay up for bid with no reserve
http://www.ebay.com/itm/152102105421?_trksid=p2055119.m1438.l2649&ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AIT
We’ll see how it does…the bidders may or may not know there is a Moog minimoog reissue coming.
The impact of the new model D on pricing of the vintage minimoog D…as everything it is demand vs. supply.
The more reissues made the more impact on the vintage.
As for me I have serial number 10542 which I bought in '79
— Needs keyboard work (has needed maintenance in the past)
- Missing the top wood piece
++ Modified to have a separate input CV to each oscillator (these still work well)).
- Tuning is excellent in my opinion.
- Power supply board failed last year, I replaced capacitors and diodes.
- Dreading other capacitors to fail.
I will not sell or trade it in to obtain a reissue.
The reissue
-
sounded excellent (familiar) on a couple of videos I've seen.
++ keyboard surely must be an improvement at least maintenance wise.
+++ additions are a +plus+
- expect tuning will be good n stable
- if i didn’t have my vintage I would get the reissue (I may get one anyway)
– really have become enamored with my vintage’s a separate CV input to each oscillator (Moog please offer a custom mod.
- not thrilled of the oscillator board choice (since it differs from mine (with the extra high frequency adjustables)
For those of you who have craved a mini your chance is here…preorder or wait to demo one in person
Another question will the reissues hold their value into the future?
This ones comes with outdoor stand, nice touch, stand also doubles as an extra on Game of Thrones
A brand new, factory perfect, Model D with aftertouch and CV outs for $3500 is gonna make it nearly impossible for these (mostly) rat dealers on ebay to ask $5000+ for a vintage model. The price of vintage Mini’s are going to come down for as long as new Model D’s are in production.
Vintage synths in general are insanely overvalued. Given a reasonable alternative, the vast majority of players don’t care if their synth is vintage, and usually prefer a new 100% functional instrument. The fact that you can get a newly manufactured miniaturized MS20 for $400 has cut the value of vintage MS20s in half. Before the miniMS20 came out, vintage models were routinely selling for $2000+. Now that there’s a reasonable alternative, I see vintage MS20s sitting on ebay unsold for months at $1000.
I own a beautiful Model D that I was lucky enough to find before they started selling for ridiculous $$$. Of course I want it to be valuable, but it drives me crazy when I see these handful of dealers on ebay buying up all the vintage synths and then just arbitrarily doubling their prices every 6 months.
I never understood why Moog abandon this in the first place. It was an affordable “MODULAR BOARD” player. A perfect “SOUND” niche in the music market . IMO it should have remained the flagship.
A brand new, factory perfect, Model D with aftertouch and CV outs for $3500 is gonna make it nearly impossible for these (mostly) rat dealers on ebay to ask $5000+ for a vintage model.
And it’s not just Aftertouch (or After Pressure as the Minimoog calls it); the Velocity CV Out also works beautifully. The AFTER PRESSURE and VELOCITY INT. CONTROL OUTPUTS each have a small trim pot shaft that lets you quickly set the desired output depth of those controllers to make them work perfectly with whichever EXT. CONTROL INPUTS you send the CVs to (LOUDNESS, FILTER, OSCILLATOR, MOD.SRC.) and for whatever values the destination knobs are set at.
Being able to choose between LAST NOTE, LOW-NOTE, and HIGH-NOTE PRIORITY, as well as MULTI-TRIGGER ON and MULTI-TRIGGER OFF (LEGATO), really helps to make it feel more like a modern performance synth.
The ability to engage a KEYBOARD TUNING ERROR mode helps to simulate the variations in the original keyboard’s fixed resistor network.
I’ve been playing one of these for several months now, and I still get the same rush every time I put my hands on it.
The ability to engage a KEYBOARD TUNING ERROR mode helps to simulate the variations in the original keyboard’s fixed resistor network.
I am really surprised at this… ‘simulation’..?
I thought this new Model ‘D’ was touted as being an exact copy of the original… in which case those inherent ‘variations’ should come as standard…? If it’s having to ‘simulate’ the old quirks of the Model ‘D’ then it’s not the same, surely…?
I mean, the Model 15 for the iPad & iPhone is also a ‘simulation’ - is it not…?
I find that ‘simulations’ usually fall short of the real deal.. ![]()
I never understood why Moog abandon this in the first place. It was an affordable “MODULAR BOARD” player. A perfect “SOUND” niche in the music market . IMO it should have remained the flagship.
I couldn’t have said it better myself, hey wait a minute … ![]()
I am really surprised at this… ‘simulation’..? I thought this new Model ‘D’ was touted as being an exact copy of the original… in which case those inherent ‘variations’ should come as standard…? If it’s having to ‘simulate’ the old quirks of the Model ‘D’ then it’s not the same, surely…?
Hi noddyspuncture,
No need to be surprised. It has been stated in the specs and videos, as well as this forum, that the keybed is modern (hence MIDI, Velocity, Aftertouch). For those who miss the inherent inconsistencies of the original keybed, a reasonable simulation has been made available.
I find that ‘simulations’ usually fall short of the real deal..
Fortunately, the release of the new Model D will not make it any harder to buy an original Model D (if that’s what you must have), and will most likely make it easier and cheaper to do so. So it’s all good ![]()