Music Geeks Are Retrofitting Old iPods to Keep the Perfect MP3 Player Alive

Apple hasn’t sold the iPod Classic since September 2014, when it trimmed the iPod lineup down to the iPod Touch, iPod Nano, and iPod Shuffle. The message from Apple was clear: the iPod, that famously “perfect thing” that was designed to hold your music library in your pocket, no longer made sense in a world where when tens of millions of songs were now merely an app away.

But for some music fans, the high cost of mobile data, and a desire to have their whole library on their person at all times, has them returning to the old standby.

A quick search on eBay finds several vendors selling refurbished models of old iPods that include brand new batteries and storage drives. The drives in these refurbished models, which tend to go for around $300 to $400, are typically high-capacity solid state drives (SSDs) with as much as 256GB of space—enough for more than 50,000 songs encoded at typical bitrates.

“I’ve [refurbished] four iPod Classics and six iPod Minis,” one iPod reseller, Tired8281, told me recently via Reddit private message. “They all sold, and I made a nice profit on all but one.” These refurbished iPods, he explained, are all outfitted with brand new batteries and, depending on the model, either a CompactFlash card or an SD card. Both solutions replace the mechanical hard drives that were originally present on the portable media player, increasing both battery life and the device’s responsiveness since there’s no moving parts to slow things down.

Source: Music Geeks Are Retrofitting Old iPods to Keep the Perfect MP3 Player Alive | Motherboard


One Response to Music Geeks Are Retrofitting Old iPods to Keep the Perfect MP3 Player Alive

  1. I never had a “classic” iPod but I did recently retrofit a Creative Zen player with a new 2.5″ hard drive (40 GB replacing the old dead 30 GB). I also bought a new battery and a battery charger since the jack for the plug is broken (it does not charge via USB). These days flash memory is so cheap it seems like you are better off buying an few years old android phone that accepts microSD and getting a 128 GB card for it and using that as your music player. If you aren’t hung up on the iPod interface anyway…