How long does it take to "learn" and "love" new gear?

Discussion in 'Soundgear' started by Garamondo Furbish, Nov 28, 2024 at 4:22 PM.

?

how long to bond to new hardware

  1. a week

    2 vote(s)
    50.0%
  2. a month

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  3. 90 days

    1 vote(s)
    25.0%
  4. fk it- its going in the dumpster

    1 vote(s)
    25.0%
  1. Garamondo Furbish

    Garamondo Furbish Audiosexual

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    I have noticed as I have acquired a few more bits for more production chains, that it always takes longer than I thought to fully integrate things and learn to use and experiment with hardware I've added.

    I'm adding some firewire gear, so I had to dig out an older computer, add a firewire interface, upgrade ram, add an ssd, upgrade USB etc, just to be able to install the drivers and then add the hardware.Before I even get to terms with using the device. So a 30$ impulse purchase requires another 40$ in upgrades and two weeks in time (just doing it in free moments when I'm bored). Glad I have the old computers lying around waiting for a purpose in life.

    But it does reinforce my philosphy which is once a chain works, stop fucking with it..
    I'm trying to add a Focusrite Liquidmix 16, just for shits and grins, and to try remixing some old songs.

    There really is no such thing as plug n play, is the lesson I've learned over the years..
     
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  3. ArticStorm

    ArticStorm Moderator Staff Member

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    depends on preknowledge and how much time you want to invest?
    Willingness to read manuals is also important.

    learning a new synth takes a short time for me, i played with so many of these.
    Hardware synths are always nice to keep and reading the manual is no big deal for me.
    A few sessions and i learned them.
     
  4. Riddim Machine

    Riddim Machine Audiosexual

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    I try to use the plugin version and watch some videos of the hardware before buying it, so i know what to expect. No regrets until now. I don't have money to buy gear for experiments. If the gear in question is a interface or a converter, i just stick with the most popular brands and models that will serve me at most. I don't need a 16 channel converter if i'm not recording a full band and using a ton of mics at the same time.
     
  5. ArticStorm

    ArticStorm Moderator Staff Member

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    to answer more in detail:

    if i really buy hardware, then i make sure i totally feel comfortable with it: I like toying with the idea of what the hardware can do, so i read the manual before i get it and make feature comparisions - Will i ever use it? For what will i use it.

    I hate to buy stuff i dont like after a 2 weeks, its so much work to ship it back or resell.

    i played with the idea buying a 90s synth for 10 month, i fixed a price in my mind, did my research what is a price, what feature does it have, is it good for me? I also made sure, that there is no softsynth, which does cover it already, no emulation is really planned for it.

    i bought the synth and i love it since then, the bonding was already done as i clicked on buying and started waiting for it.
     
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