In 2017,
Behringer announced it would replicate the CEM3340 VCO chips used in the OB-Xa synthesizer. The widow of chip creator
Doug Curtis released a statement clarifying that the replica was made without permission and that Curtis "would be deeply saddened by the attempt of others to trade on his name and to make unsubstantiated claims of equivalency to his original inventions". In 2018, Uli Behringer announced that Behringer would be producing a clone of the OB-Xa known as the UB-Xa, but a microprocessor shortage delayed the project. The following year, however, Behringer announced that the UB-Xa was ready for manufacture, and announced a desktop version. The first UB-Xa units were delivered in December 2023. In May 2022, the Oberheim OB-X8, a new 8-voice analog synthesizer with the voice architecture and filters of four classic Oberheim models: the
OB-X,
OB-SX, OB-Xa, and
OB-8, along with functionality and features not included on the original models, was announced. The new synthesizer is manufactured by
Sequential in partnership with
Tom Oberheim. ==References==