Broken 'Rotary Control' jack
Posted: 18 Sep 2012, 14:34
The plastic barrel inside the Rotary Control jack on the back of my C2 organ is broken, and now rotary control doesn't work. It probably got broken when I left the half-moon switch plugged in, and then somehow bumped the back of the C2- I'm not sure.
It's a drag, because I love using the half-moon switch to control my Leslie 3300.
We have a great keyboard repair shop around here. However, in order to fix the C2, he said I would have to leave the keyboard at the shop for at least 2 weeks, because his parts supplier takes 2 weeks to send that particular part, and there is no generic substitute for it. I asked him if he could order the part and then I could bring the keyboard by in a couple of weeks and just leave it overnight, but he said no to that option.
I gig with this keyboard 5-6 times a week, and practice for at least 3 hours a day in addition. I could borrow a Roland VK7 for a while from a friend, but the thought of using that for at least 2 weeks makes me want to cry.
Anyone know how I could order that part on my own, then take the keyboard and the replacement part to the repair guy? Or are there any other options? Maybe playing the Roland clonewheel would be fun after all- anybody played one before?
It's a drag, because I love using the half-moon switch to control my Leslie 3300.
We have a great keyboard repair shop around here. However, in order to fix the C2, he said I would have to leave the keyboard at the shop for at least 2 weeks, because his parts supplier takes 2 weeks to send that particular part, and there is no generic substitute for it. I asked him if he could order the part and then I could bring the keyboard by in a couple of weeks and just leave it overnight, but he said no to that option.
I gig with this keyboard 5-6 times a week, and practice for at least 3 hours a day in addition. I could borrow a Roland VK7 for a while from a friend, but the thought of using that for at least 2 weeks makes me want to cry.
Anyone know how I could order that part on my own, then take the keyboard and the replacement part to the repair guy? Or are there any other options? Maybe playing the Roland clonewheel would be fun after all- anybody played one before?