djwayne
I still have the JV-1080 with expansion cards, JV-880, Emu Vintage Keys, Proteus One,and Proteus Two. I don't miss all those midi and audio cables one bit. I even eliminated a mixing board when I switched to virtual synths and sample programs. Everything is wired inside my computer. No muss, no fuss. My workflow is so much easier to deal with now. They were great back in the day, but virtual instruments and sample programs have come a long way over the years.
I had all those too but in the end I ended up with a JV2080 with a bunch of expansions in. The front panel is much better and it holds 8 expansions as opposed to 4 in the JV1080. Navigating presets is a breeze too on the JV2080.
I agree with you on virtual instruments. I have probably well over 150 of them now. Most of them going into territory the hardware cannot even imagine.
I also use Roland JD800 and a Kawai K5000W which is also one weird sound synth. Have not quite heard anything like it actually in the virtual world either. I still have a big Emu sampler too, E5000 Ultra. All those Proteus sound banks are available for it and they all load up and sound great. You can edit the sounds though and the effects also sound pretty nice too.
The editors I mentioned also allow you to send sounds and search them from your computer. That is the way around it. Studio One does not handle SYSEX but an editor running in tandem with it will. Because the editor is addressing the synth directly and not through Studio One. The editors have all the memory patches listed and will act like instrument definitions.
What the hardware is great for though is creating a wall of sound over midi while your DAW does not even break a sweat. If I put all my hardware into multi timbral mode I could get something like 100 layers of music all playing at once!
Studio One also has rock solid timing over external midi as well. Especially through an 8 MIDI output port device. Cubase and Logic are also excellent in this regard too.