About Our Work

We started this service because too many repair shops treat musical equipment like generic electronics. They replace components without understanding the circuit, or they suggest buying new gear when the old equipment is worth saving.

Workshop environment with tools and equipment

Our Approach

Musical equipment develops character over time. A vintage amplifier doesn't sound the way it does by accident. The component tolerances, the way parts have aged, the specific circuit design—all of these contribute to the instrument's voice.

When we repair equipment, we're not trying to erase that history. We're trying to restore function while preserving what makes the equipment valuable in the first place. That means understanding not just how circuits work in theory, but how they behave in practice after years of use.

Most failures happen gradually. Capacitors drift, solder joints develop microfractures, switches wear out. These problems are repairable if you know what to look for and how to address them without disturbing the rest of the circuit.

Technical Background

We have over fifteen years of experience working with musical equipment, from vintage analog gear to modern digital interfaces. This includes formal training in electronics and years of hands-on work diagnosing and repairing equipment that other shops couldn't fix.

Equipment Knowledge

We maintain a library of service manuals, schematics, and technical documentation for hundreds of instruments and devices. When original parts are unavailable, we know how to source alternatives that maintain the original performance characteristics.

Workshop Facilities

Our workshop includes oscilloscopes, signal generators, audio analysers, and other diagnostic equipment necessary for proper testing. We don't guess at problems—we measure, test, and verify before and after repairs.

Quality Standards

Every repair receives post-service testing to ensure it meets or exceeds factory specifications. We document the work performed and provide clear explanations of what was done and why it was necessary.

What We Stand For

We believe equipment should be repaired properly or not at all. That means taking the time to diagnose issues correctly, using appropriate parts, and testing thoroughly before returning equipment to the owner. It means being honest about what's feasible and what isn't. And it means treating every piece of equipment with the respect it deserves, regardless of its market value.