My TASCAM 246 went 17 years with no issues. After that it was time for a new pinch roller and capstan drive belt. Other than that, in the 20 years I’ve owned it, I’ve only had to repair one VU meter. In my case it only cost me parts and time, as I maintain my own gear.
Ok, putting sound quality issues aside and just speaking long-term cost of ownership for the moment…
I’ve replaced a lot of caps and other components in various devices, including many in computer power supplies. All electronic devices and components have vulnerabilities and statistical Mean-Time-Before-Failure rates, but not all vulnerable components in all individual devices will fail. Many have and will continue to last far beyond the projected functional life.
Speaking of which (and speaking as an IT professional), three years for a hard drive is a long life, as the projected life of the typical hard drive is probably a quarter of a capacitor made in the 70’s. Your HD may be living out its golden year as we speak.
The maintenance costs of ADATs, DAWs, HDRs, MDMs, etc. are often underestimated. This is especially tricky with PC-based DAWs because maintenance costs are hidden in general PC maintenance so familiar to this computer-centric society.
For example you may ask an average Joe that has used both a cassette 4-track and a DAW for the last five years, which one has been most problematic, and get something like the following…
BECK:
“So Joe, which has had more maintenance issues, your TASCAM cassette 4-track or your DAW?”
JOE:
“Well, I had to replace a couple rubber belts in the 4-track, which was a real pain in the ass! And I really hate having to clean and demagnetize the tape path every two weeks or before an important session… what a hassle!
Other than a new power supply, two flaky RAM modules and a bad hard drive my DAW has been maintenance-free. I also had to upgrade the BIOS to recognize the larger hard drive, which didn’t go too well because there was a bug in the first release that gave me the BSOD when I tried to enable DMA. I could no longer even get into the BIOS setup, so I had to download the fix at work and boot from a floppy to load the new BIOS version. Oh yeah, I almost forgot… I’ve had to replace a couple cooling fans that had been making really annoying grinding noises for awhile before they failed and caused my CPU to overheat and my PC to freeze.
Oh wait… did I mention that I’ve had to reinstall widows and all my programs three times… twice from those viruses and once because Norton Antivirus corrupted my boot sector with its inoculation routine. It made the FAT partition unreadable, and I couldn’t even see my files using the recovery console. But that was before they came out with the fix. It’s all good now… except I lost all the songs I was working on and had to start over. My recording software itself has had no problems, except I can’t use some of the newer, cool plug-ins until I upgrade. Eh, but my current motherboard and processor won’t support the upgrade, so I’m looking at a new PC… no big deal, right?
So hey, other than that my DAW has had no problems at all.”
Your friend,
Joe