Gilles, you just made my day! I had an FC-3 pedal lying around, but not being the DIY-soldering type (I can smell the burnt flesh now...), I'd never run into the thought of _inverting_ its polarity -- I just figured that I'd eventually get a Yamaha keyboard that worked with it. (Or a Korg -- I have the DS1H, too, from the days when I was just trying different pedals willy-nilly.)
Lo and behold, all I have to do is right-click on the velocity window, select the "Sustain pedal velocity map," and flip the graph -- voilà! I can now make the goofy pedal do my bidding!!! Take that, you Yamaha schmucks!!!!!
(Well, actually, Pianoteq should get all the credit...)
The thing seems to have a range of only min=18, max=116 (ADDENDUM: Pianoteq pedal values between 0.14 and 0.92), but the curve already accounts for that, and I can adjust it accordingly -- so that the max/min velocities are achieved within these ranges! (I also have to compensate for the visual of seeing the pedal depressed when it's up and vice-versa. Easy enough! Or have I been drinking too much cough syrup this week... %^)
I kinda missed half-pedalling (and was just fudging it with other control forms, like my standard expression pedal, or just entering the value in Pianoteq), but I never really considered it to be all _that_ important. But I'm happy to say that I've finally emerged from the Dark Ages!
Last edited by dhalfen (05-11-2009 16:38)
"Our developers, who art in Toulouse, hallowed be thy physical-models.
Thy version 4 come, thy new instruments be done, in the computer as it is in the wood!"