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sx900 silent key on one voice!

Started by anon125, August 06, 2020, 11:34:22 AM

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Aquilauno


Great Eileen,
effective idea ... mystery solved WOW!!

jwyvern

Yes, at least on Genos (I do not have sx 900) the 3Band DSP is deliberately set to minus 12 Midgain over a very narrow frequency band around 400Hz. So there's the explanation for hearing a weaker sound around that frequency.
Why on earth it is set like that is anyone's guess. As suggested it sounds much better when turned off!
John

EileenL

Yes John it is a strange setting and would have been better left to OFF but thank goodness we can change all these things to our own liking.
Eileen

anon125

Quote from: EileenL on August 10, 2020, 06:35:25 AM
I have now tried this voice on my keyboard. If you go into the settings you will see this voice is set in the ON position of 3band EQ. Turn it to off and the voice plays as it should. Try selecting a different EQ setting or DSP.
Can this be done on the sx900?
I have no idea what is meant re EQ DSP etc
Thanks

SeaGtGruff

Quote from: anon125 on August 10, 2020, 11:10:09 AMCan this be done on the sx900?
I have no idea what is meant re EQ DSP etc
Thanks

EQ is the Equalizer, which lets you adjust the sound levels for different frequency ranges.

DSP is Digital Sound Processing, which are the various sound-processing functions like Reverb, Chorus, and many other types of effects.

I'm sure the PSR-SX900 has both of those. :)

overover

Quote from: anon125 on August 10, 2020, 11:10:09 AM
Can this be done on the sx900?
I have no idea what is meant re EQ DSP etc
Thanks

Hi anon125,

you cannot overwrite the original Preset Voice with the edited Voice. You can either save the edited Voice as a "User Voice" (go to "Voice Edit" for this) OR you can memorize it to a Registration. You can also memorize an edited Voice to an OTS, but you finally have to save the STYLE as a "User Style" (because the OTS data is part of the STYLE data).


Best regards,
Chris
● Everyone kept saying "That won't work!" - Then someone came along who didn't know that, and - just did it.
● Never put the Manual too far away: There's more in it than you think! ;-)

anon125

I threw in the towel!
well actually i gently lay 4 layers of thick towel on one speaker.
Still G is lower. So one speaker is not affecting the other.

I have decided not to try and adjust anything in case i mess up something else!
It sure looks like the solution has been found.
So i will wait til i am more experienced.
thanks all

panos

I found this video of Casper's with DSP effects on Genos.
Maybe this can help you?
Can you recognize the menu's?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KqBuUkCz7Bk

Older models have different menu so I will not post any video and confuse you.

By the way the more informations about a question will give better answers.

For example some effects radically affect the sound in many many ways.
I thought you had disabled the DSP effects,you had disabled the initial touch button, there were not a second and third voice involved, the keyboard's general EQ is in normal and not on extreme settings etc. and still you have that problem.

Otherwise an hypothetical scenario like this may happen:  :)
-Hello Radio One here.How can I help you sir?
-Your radio signal is getting weaker and weaker as the time passes by.
-Sorry to hear that sir.Is there by any chance that the bad weather in your region is causing the problem? Maybe there is an upcoming storm and too many lightnings?
-How could I know?
-What do you mean sir?
-That tunnel that I am driving in, is way long...


Annon,
don't be afraid to play with the effects of the voices and try to change them.
Nothing bad will happen to the keyboard, nothing bad will happen to the preset voice or the preset style.
When you switch to another voice or style the previous settings of them will come back immediately.

SeaGtGruff

Quote from: SeaGtGruff on August 10, 2020, 11:27:43 AMDSP is Digital Sound Processing

I meant to say "Digital Signal Processing"; I thought it looked funny the way I typed it. ;) Of course, in this case the "signal" is an audio signal, so "sound processing" works, too.