I am finally posting my first thread on this wonderful forum of yours. A few months ago, I attempted to purchase a V-synth through eBay. Unfortunately, it turned out to be a well coordinated scam that left me without a grand and without the so much wanted board.
All despondent, I spent many days just reading this forum, drooling over some of your audio demos and just hoping that I would get a chance at another V-synth for a decent price. For a brief moment I thought about saving up for a V-synth GT, but decided against it due to the price and the fact that IMO only the original V is to become a 'classic'.
Fast forward to 10 days ago...and there was this NIB V-synth on eBay being sold in Ontario with a one year Canadian-wide warranty! Price? A thousand bucks!
Assured that the transaction was through Paypal and having communicated with the seller by phone, I took the plunge and now I am the proud owner of a Roland V-synth!
It was completely new, unused, version 1.12 V-synth. After struggling to make the synth and my PC speak to each other, I finally managed to upgrade it to version 2.00. I am totally blown away by its sonic possibilities and it complements my Korg TR-88 workstation very nicely.
A bit about myself: I live in Vancouver, in Beautiful British Columbia. I am 45, and I used to be very much into synths and electronic music in the 80's. I owned almost every Roland and Korg keyboard or rack that came out between 1984-1990. Then, in 1991, for personal reasons, I quit music and went on a 15-year hiatus, which only ended late last year.
(For the record, I wasn't in jail!

Technology, of course, never slowed down. On the contrary, it kept developing faster and faster, but I was not in the game anymore. This has left me with a 15-year knowledge gap and I have a lot of catching up to do - especially in the synth to PC communication department.
I am not very much into computers, except for the basic applications. I have a Cubase LE which I got with my new Alesis USB8 mixer, but I have yet to figure out how to connect everything together into one smooth home studio.
I hope you guys will have the patience with me when I ask a question that for many of you may appear obvious. I work as an educator, and I believe that the only stupid questions are the ones that are not asked.
I still have much research to do when it comes to computer audio files and data transfer. Stuff such as .wav, .aif or .mp3 were not around when I was fully involved with music. Heck, not even the Internet was around!!!
I am looking forward to exchanging some good information with you guys in the months and years to come. I am convinced that the V-synth is a classic in the making, and that a couple decades down the road this synth will be valued and respected as much as or even more than some classic 70's and 80's boards are today.
Thanks for keeping such a wonderful place up and running. It's INVALUABLE!!!
Cheers,
Milo