I used to own both Experience cards. The I board was okay, but what was interesting abvout it was that it had so many waves from the Vintage board. My attitud was like, why buy the Vintage card if I have this?
The Experience II board is great. Even with my three full expansion cards, I still hold a slot open for this board. It is very useful, had a large variety, and since I've made so many sequences with this card, I can't give it up.
An Experience III card make no sense at this point IMHO.
Personally, I think that Roland can make the
most profit if they do what I suggested in an earlier thread. Roland should make
light versions of their XV cards for the JV/XPs.
Why is that? Well, it's economically feasible for Roland. Plus, most if not all of the JV/XP owners out there have heard the XV. Most of hem are impressed, but will ont upgrade for many reasons. One is the price. two could be no sampling or maybe they are just comfortable with their gear by now and have invested a lot in Roland already.
If Roland released 8MB lite XV cards in the SRJV format, I'm pretty sure that it would be a big hit with JV/XP owners. They could "upgrade" to XV sounds or have a card full of SRX samples on an expansion board and won't have to break an arm or leg to do it.
At that rate, there will still be people who will buy an XV anyway. But then there would be thrice the sales - There would be SRX, SRJV and SRX Lite, not to mention XV, XP and JV sales.
This would benefit Roland and the consumer.
Just think what would go down if Roland released SRJV versions of SRX boards and SRJV versions of S760 CDs for us JV/XP owners, this could definitely fulfill Roland's future-proof obligation.
Also, why not do this since they included SRJV slots in the XV series. After all, Roland did remove the S0PCM slots on the new Super JVs and XPs right?
The Infamous EPU.