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| John O'Flaherty... |
Posted: Tue Dec 30, 2008 12:37 am |
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Guest
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Hello everyone,
I'm thinking of getting an 88-key midi keyboard/digital piano. Some
have weighted keys, good for simulating a piano keyboard. Some have
both piano and organ output. The key weighting seems undesirable for
an organ keyboard. Are there any keyboards with variable or defeatable
mechanical weighting? And a related question, but different. The piano
keyboard is velocity sensitive, but an organ keyboard shouldn't be. Is
this taken into account in organ settings of digital pianos?
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John |
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| recneps... |
Posted: Tue Dec 30, 2008 2:32 am |
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Guest
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On Mon, 29 Dec 2008 22:37:18 -0600, John O'Flaherty wrote:
Quote: Hello everyone,
I'm thinking of getting an 88-key midi keyboard/digital piano. Some have
weighted keys, good for simulating a piano keyboard. Some have both
piano and organ output. The key weighting seems undesirable for an organ
keyboard. Are there any keyboards with variable or defeatable mechanical
weighting? And a related question, but different. The piano keyboard is
velocity sensitive, but an organ keyboard shouldn't be. Is this taken
into account in organ settings of digital pianos?
To the problem of the waiting of the keyboard it can be affixed the
peeses of the lead. Many say that 2 oz be good for this with the blue tac
holding. You can make more peese of lead, nothing to stopping you do
this. The defeating this is by the remove of the lead peeses blue tac and
lead peeses. Works very good.
Velocity can too be control with sparnge glue unnerneeth the keys board.
Too can be defeated with the remove operations of the glue.
As for organs it is true for the instrument that the sound is for special
patch of the instrument. This fix the sensitiving problem easy. |
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