To mod or not to mod

CheapSuitG

The TubeSchemer
I have been noodling around with modding pedals. Have done a couple ds-1, an sd-1 and a cry baby thus far.

I got a new to me ds-1 last night, 2002 so has hole through parts still but it is mint. I mean minty mint. Seller had the box and all the goodies minus the boss sticker.

Do I mod it? I’ll be taking a drill to the enclosure.

Do I keep it? Not a fan of the stock ds-1 at all, hence I’ve been modding them. Also it’s old but not vintage or from a particularly good era.

Do I sell it? Got it for pretty cheap, probably could make 50% of my investment back if the right buyer came along. But a pristine ds-1 shopper is rare I assume. If I list it on reverb, those profits go away.

I’m torn, silly thing to be torn about but this thing is like new. The guy even put a new 9v in it for me, he took good care of it.

What’s does the brain trust say?
 
My personal opinion is that it could likely resell for more after modding. There are a billion of DS-1's made so they are not rare by a long shot. Marketing is also key. You can spin a sale to make it sound like you made the DS-1 a much better pedal. I personally don't a stock DS-1 either but just a couple tweaks can make a difference. So, my opinion is mod that thang
 
If you're going to keep it for yourself to play, mod it.

If you're wanting to make money off of it, then hang on to it for another 20 years when DS-1 OG units have finally depleted because everybody modded the hell out of them all, and subsequently minty DS-1s will fetch a fortune because all the young kids (now adults) will have heard the tale of the almighty DS-1 but only unbeaten and unmodded ones contain the original Moe, Joe — so it was with vintage VWs. They were ubiquitous and so people modded the hell out of them, but now it's sacrilege to cut up a split-window or even oval-window beetle to make a Baja-bug...

Old, but not vintage... Make it a Baja-bug, I mean, mod it. It's yours, not someone else's — do with it what you will.


is-nothing-sacred-volkswagen-advert-nomad-art-and-design.jpg

Split-windows were only made up to '52 and production numbers were low for the early years.
This one has a rare folding ragtop.
Nose cut off and backend cut off, too. Runningboards removed.
Jacked up for more clearance offroad.
Aftermarket fenders OR chopped & extended stock; quick-release side-windows that don't roll down...
Street-legal but setup for desert-racing with rollcage.
Chromed front end.
Canary-yellow definitely not a stock colour until the '70s (advert is from 1970), and the flames? Well, either you like flames or you don't.


Here's a later Baja-bug, with aftermarket fenders, hood (still stock style though) and nose cone. I have this style of pieces and cage-bumpers awaiting the right bug ('66 or earlier that's been hit in the front and back) to build up.

Note the larger windshield, must be '70 or so but a pre-'73 as I don't see a finger-dent to flip open the gas-filler door.
I'm a little rusty on my VW-spotting capabilities.
176eb2fa98614e91ae5b2127d6b835d1.jpg
 
Agree with the above. I don't think that in our lifetime there will be a groundswell of primo 2002 DS-1's as collectible. If it's a daily driver or for a buddy I'd start drilling. To be honest I've never been a huge fan of DS-1's (although no dislike either) but last week got a Keeley modded one in the shop that had a LED switch installed. I think Keeley may have swapped out some caps as well.

I thought this thing sounded pretty cool. I didn't pay much attention to the mods, as it just needed a footswitch cleaning (with a warning that a replacement may or may not be warranted if the problem happened again), but I was impressed that it opened up the sound of the pedal a bit. Not as compressed.
 
I’ve done the seeing eye/untra Keely mod and the JHS synth mod.

The Keeley is great, sounds like a ds-1 without the ice pick.

Did the full JHS synth mod, it was fun but useless. That said, if you do everything but the switches it’s a really good drive pedal. Not a ds-1 at all, it’s pretty cool.

Agree with the above. I don't think that in our lifetime there will be a groundswell of primo 2002 DS-1's as collectible. If it's a daily driver or for a buddy I'd start drilling. To be honest I've never been a huge fan of DS-1's (although no dislike either) but last week got a Keeley modded one in the shop that had a LED switch installed. I think Keeley may have swapped out some caps as well.

I thought this thing sounded pretty cool. I didn't pay much attention to the mods, as it just needed a footswitch cleaning (with a warning that a replacement may or may not be warranted if the problem happened again), but I was impressed that it opened up the sound of the pedal a bit. Not as compressed.
 
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