What is Mint?
- Kevin Lightner
- Posts: 1587
- Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 5:20 pm
- Location: Wrightwood
What is Mint?
Ok, we've all seen sales and auctions describe an item as "mint."
To me, mint is just an opinion and usually one from someone that doesn't know much about the insides of a synth or how things age.
I firmly believe there's no such thing as a mint vintage synth because mint usually describes something perfect and unused and age creates imperfections.
Even if a synth was bought new and stored... to me.... it would not be mint.
Everything in it is still aged.
For example, electrolytic caps are supposed to last (within spec) for only about 15 or so years.
Rubber tends to harden up and crack, while other materials turn to goo.
A synth could have a family of bugs inside, tons of unseen dog or cat hair, worn or tarnished contact surfaces in switches and pots, etc.
Adjustment trimmers have been sitting on the same surface for decades.
There's also little indication externally that it might have been stored in a very hot or cool place.
So what is mint to you?
Does it exist?
Is the external condition coupled with the knowledge and expertise of the seller good enough to believe their opinion of mint every time?
One never sees a house or car billed that way.
I am also curious if someone was take a synth, replace the aged components with new ones and all that, is that synth still mint or newly made into mint?
And with that said... and no gradient to the levels of "mint"... would such a serviced synth then be mint (and equal to another billed as mint) or somehow "ultra mint", "double mint" (heh) or whatever.
That is, what is the variance allowed for the "mint" qualification or even at what level does someone consider something "restored"?
Keep in mind that I'm biased: I've seen a lot of "mint" and "restored" synths in for service.
Your thoughts?
To me, mint is just an opinion and usually one from someone that doesn't know much about the insides of a synth or how things age.
I firmly believe there's no such thing as a mint vintage synth because mint usually describes something perfect and unused and age creates imperfections.
Even if a synth was bought new and stored... to me.... it would not be mint.
Everything in it is still aged.
For example, electrolytic caps are supposed to last (within spec) for only about 15 or so years.
Rubber tends to harden up and crack, while other materials turn to goo.
A synth could have a family of bugs inside, tons of unseen dog or cat hair, worn or tarnished contact surfaces in switches and pots, etc.
Adjustment trimmers have been sitting on the same surface for decades.
There's also little indication externally that it might have been stored in a very hot or cool place.
So what is mint to you?
Does it exist?
Is the external condition coupled with the knowledge and expertise of the seller good enough to believe their opinion of mint every time?
One never sees a house or car billed that way.
I am also curious if someone was take a synth, replace the aged components with new ones and all that, is that synth still mint or newly made into mint?
And with that said... and no gradient to the levels of "mint"... would such a serviced synth then be mint (and equal to another billed as mint) or somehow "ultra mint", "double mint" (heh) or whatever.
That is, what is the variance allowed for the "mint" qualification or even at what level does someone consider something "restored"?
Keep in mind that I'm biased: I've seen a lot of "mint" and "restored" synths in for service.
Your thoughts?
- latigid on
- Posts: 1579
- Joined: Mon Jan 30, 2006 3:47 pm
- Location: Auckland, New Zealand
Yeah, I take "mint" to mean the exterior/physical condition. If someone wanted to sell me a mint '58 Corvette, I would assume that the paint and parts were all original and in good condition, but I would also hope the tires, oil and other serviceable items had been replaced over the years. A car could be "mint" and still have major problems under the hood, and the same is true with a synth. I would also take their claim with a grain of salt.
To me, mint means that the synth is in perfect condition on the outside, but it must be working perfectly as well.
If I bought a "mint" synth off of eBay and it looked perfect but did not work, I would be pissed.....
In actuality, however, I suppose that Kevin's definition is correct for an old synth. The insides cannot be mint if they are 30 years old, because of the natural deterioration of the components due to age. If the parts have been replaced, it is no longer original, and thus, to my mind, no longer mint either. I would call the insides refurbished.
If I bought a used Voyager that was like new on the exterior and working perfectly, I WOULD call that "mint" because the interior workings were new enough to not be concerned about deterioration.
If I bought a "mint" synth off of eBay and it looked perfect but did not work, I would be pissed.....
In actuality, however, I suppose that Kevin's definition is correct for an old synth. The insides cannot be mint if they are 30 years old, because of the natural deterioration of the components due to age. If the parts have been replaced, it is no longer original, and thus, to my mind, no longer mint either. I would call the insides refurbished.
If I bought a used Voyager that was like new on the exterior and working perfectly, I WOULD call that "mint" because the interior workings were new enough to not be concerned about deterioration.
Thanks Bob!!
- space_nerd
- Posts: 98
- Joined: Tue Jun 07, 2005 4:15 pm
- Location: Greece
- Contact:
I believe that term "Mint" is refers only to the external appearence of an instrument.
There may be unplayed, never gigged instruments that have components inside them that are time-bombs: Capacitors, especially in the power supplies that, if the are leaky they may cause great damage in the instrument -for example you find a synth that hasn't be powered on for ages: if the power supply is bad it may toast the internals
Many people believe that if you see an instrument that has minimal external wear issues this is a good sign that it's interiors may be in good shape too.
But it's not a rule: my humble advise is that if you find a machine that you don't know about, an abadoned instrument in "mint" condition or any other, take it to an technician to check it out.
And don't forget things with CEMs inside. My synth is full of them and they have a specific life-cycle
This must applied to any machine with custom chips inside.
So, "mint" is a term used by many sellers to tempt people.
There may be unplayed, never gigged instruments that have components inside them that are time-bombs: Capacitors, especially in the power supplies that, if the are leaky they may cause great damage in the instrument -for example you find a synth that hasn't be powered on for ages: if the power supply is bad it may toast the internals
Many people believe that if you see an instrument that has minimal external wear issues this is a good sign that it's interiors may be in good shape too.
But it's not a rule: my humble advise is that if you find a machine that you don't know about, an abadoned instrument in "mint" condition or any other, take it to an technician to check it out.
And don't forget things with CEMs inside. My synth is full of them and they have a specific life-cycle
This must applied to any machine with custom chips inside.
So, "mint" is a term used by many sellers to tempt people.
I would say that "mint" is a meaningless sales term, like "free gift" (what sort of "gift" isn't free?).
As has been pointed out, mint can refer to the exterior appearance. It should mean "appears to be new," but there's no guarantee that any advertiser uses it that way.
For collectors, "mint" can mean "no replaced parts." Of course, that also means if it is an old product, it may not work. It may also mean "replaced parts identical to original" as opposed to "upgraded" when means "replaced parts superior (in the seller's mind) to original."
But the bottom line is that it just a line. Check with any seller for specifics.
As has been pointed out, mint can refer to the exterior appearance. It should mean "appears to be new," but there's no guarantee that any advertiser uses it that way.
For collectors, "mint" can mean "no replaced parts." Of course, that also means if it is an old product, it may not work. It may also mean "replaced parts identical to original" as opposed to "upgraded" when means "replaced parts superior (in the seller's mind) to original."
But the bottom line is that it just a line. Check with any seller for specifics.
- Kevin Lightner
- Posts: 1587
- Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 5:20 pm
- Location: Wrightwood
Thanks for the comments.
I guess mint is sort of like "sexy."
It's all up to the beholder.
A few additional comments:
I was the one who put up the "near mint" 2600.
It was put up on Ebay, not Matrixsynth.
He just has no original content so has to copy things like that.
It was a ragged 2600, but there's a mint plant growing outside here, so I put them both together as a joke.
CEM chips a finite life?
Probably all chips do.
But I rarely have to replace CEMs or even CMOS chips.
Things aren't as bad (at least presently) as some people would claim.
The last time I located a bad CMOS chip was in an Oberheim 4 voice.
Finding that chip revealed where Oberheim forgot to ground certain pins on some ICs in their keyboard interface circuit, so while the chip changed over time, Oberheim didn't follow the rules about grounding unused input pins.
The funny thing is that many of the CEMs I've had to replace, actually died because the power supply of the unit was bad- due to old capacitors.
Nowadays every synth here gets every electrolytic replaced as a rule.
I don't know how that affects their "mintiness", but it's better to have a working synth than a gorgeous doorstop.
I guess mint is sort of like "sexy."
It's all up to the beholder.
A few additional comments:
I was the one who put up the "near mint" 2600.
It was put up on Ebay, not Matrixsynth.
He just has no original content so has to copy things like that.
It was a ragged 2600, but there's a mint plant growing outside here, so I put them both together as a joke.
CEM chips a finite life?
Probably all chips do.
But I rarely have to replace CEMs or even CMOS chips.
Things aren't as bad (at least presently) as some people would claim.
The last time I located a bad CMOS chip was in an Oberheim 4 voice.
Finding that chip revealed where Oberheim forgot to ground certain pins on some ICs in their keyboard interface circuit, so while the chip changed over time, Oberheim didn't follow the rules about grounding unused input pins.
The funny thing is that many of the CEMs I've had to replace, actually died because the power supply of the unit was bad- due to old capacitors.
Nowadays every synth here gets every electrolytic replaced as a rule.
I don't know how that affects their "mintiness", but it's better to have a working synth than a gorgeous doorstop.
Kevin,
1990ies analogs too?
I heard about several CEM 3387 that died in Waldorf WAVEs and MicroWaves.
from which age on?...
Nowadays every synth here gets every electrolytic replaced as a rule.
...
1990ies analogs too?
I heard about several CEM 3387 that died in Waldorf WAVEs and MicroWaves.
keep on turning these Moog knobs
Sequence:
Prodigy * minimoog '79 * Voyager * MF102 * MF103 * MF104z * MP201 * Taurus 3 * Minitaur * Sub Phatty * MF105 * Minimoog 2017+ MUSE * One 16
Sequence:
Prodigy * minimoog '79 * Voyager * MF102 * MF103 * MF104z * MP201 * Taurus 3 * Minitaur * Sub Phatty * MF105 * Minimoog 2017+ MUSE * One 16
- Kevin Lightner
- Posts: 1587
- Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 5:20 pm
- Location: Wrightwood
from which age on?
1990ies analogs too?
That's a good question, but I rarely see synths made in the 90's and later.
Generally 15-20 years is considered a normal lifespan for electrolytics, but newer ones might last longer.
Either way, it's all up to the unit.
I've had to replace caps in our 2002 ethernet router because they failed from heat.
I'm replacing caps in a 24 yr old JP-8 power supply right now.
They were rated for 85c and leaked, so I'm installing 105c types instead.
A picture is worth a thousand words:http://www.minimoog.net/jp8cap.jpg
To me, I recognize the following top-tier categories:
Brand Spanking New - A unit recently manufactured & released to the public, in a factory-sealed box that is not damaged.
New Unit - Same as above except the unit is a number of months or years old yet still in production.
New Old Stock - Like a new unit in every way but discontinued
Mint Condition - The unit has been removed from the box & touched by the consumer's hands. Played to the extent as to confirm proper operation of all parameters.
Demo Model - New unit on a dealer's shelf, touched by many. May hold minor defects such as slight wear, scratches, etc.
Brand Spanking New - A unit recently manufactured & released to the public, in a factory-sealed box that is not damaged.
New Unit - Same as above except the unit is a number of months or years old yet still in production.
New Old Stock - Like a new unit in every way but discontinued
Mint Condition - The unit has been removed from the box & touched by the consumer's hands. Played to the extent as to confirm proper operation of all parameters.
Demo Model - New unit on a dealer's shelf, touched by many. May hold minor defects such as slight wear, scratches, etc.
Little Phatty TE #1023 • Schrittmacher • Walking Stick ribbon • Korg microXL/Electribe MX/KaossPro • Sonnus G2M
MF-101 Filter • MF-102 Ring • MF-103 Phaser • MF-104Z Delay • MF-105 MuRF • MF-107 FreqBox • MF-108M Cluster • Etherwave
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
MF-101 Filter • MF-102 Ring • MF-103 Phaser • MF-104Z Delay • MF-105 MuRF • MF-107 FreqBox • MF-108M Cluster • Etherwave
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
- Kevin Lightner
- Posts: 1587
- Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 5:20 pm
- Location: Wrightwood
What are your thoughts about the effects of time?New Old Stock - Like a new unit in every way but discontinued
Plastic and rubber can degrade and silver can tarnish.
If I sell an old switch that's never been used as NOS, but the contacts are tarnished, it wouldn't be new in every way, yet still be NOS..
Same for above.Mint Condition - The unit has been removed from the box & touched by the consumer's hands. Played to the extent as to confirm proper operation of all parameters.
Would a Moog Rogue (complete with dust cover material that's turned to goo) be Mint if it's been played once or even stored in the box from day one?
What about the electrolytics, a memory battery or tarnished key or switch contacts?
No arguments... just curious.
mint
If I buy a 1958 Chevy in mint I would think its been completely restored. But a Rogue it should look new and sound new no repairs needed.
Model D, Little Phatty Tribute w/cv, The Rogue, MF-102, CP-251, Animoog and Filtatron
This is an interesting thread.
To me, the term MINT boils down to semantics!
One definition found online (here: http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=mint&x=0&y=0):
"unused or appearing to be newly made and never used: a book in mint condition."
The words "appearing to be" are what's so interesting.
Mint one day and battery leaking all over the PCB the next!
Thank god for flash memory!
To me, the term MINT boils down to semantics!
One definition found online (here: http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=mint&x=0&y=0):
"unused or appearing to be newly made and never used: a book in mint condition."
The words "appearing to be" are what's so interesting.
My Juno-106 stills holds its presets so I didn't think much about the internal battery. So it "appears" to be "MINT". But I did know better so I cracked the Roland open and sure enough the battery wasn't looking so hot.Kevin Lightner wrote:What about the electrolytics, a memory battery or tarnished key or switch contacts?
Mint one day and battery leaking all over the PCB the next!
Thank god for flash memory!