This is almost the same thing I have spent the last 2 years trying to achieve.
Specifically, I am trying to get a Kawai NV10 digital piano to feel and sound as close as possible to a normal acoustic grand (because I'm a serious pianist but I cannot have one).
The short answer at the time of writing is that there is a limit to how close you can get with any commercial piano emulator but I have been able to get almost-kind-of-close-enough(ish) with Pianoteq and a few chosen presets. I have recently put a demo recording in the shared files which I think shows just how realistic you can actually get (A_2025_01_16_ZdyesHarasho_Prst_2025_01_16).
The biggest problem I find always, is getting the dynamic range without other things suffering (all the settings on Pianoteq seem to be interactive).
The most realistic presets to begin experimenting with are the latest Kawai ones. They are streets ahead of all previous ones. The Ryuyo preset is about the closest thing I have yet heard to a real piano with little to no modification. The Steinway and Bechstein presets - which I would have thought should be the flagship ones - are frankly disappointing and I gave up trying to achieve realism with them.
The most important setting of all is the velocity curve. I invested months building various test gadgets and doing maths and physics on the back of an envelope. I eventually succeded in getting a basic exponential curve for my NV10 keyboard which I can then tweak as necessary. This has been a huge asset. (If you are interested, read the post I put on this forum - search for "NV10")
The next thing is the sustain pedal. Again, I spent months getting a curve so that it responds exactly like a real one. It can be done.
After that, the dynamic and volume settings note-by-note (if you have the PRO version) and some tweaks to hammer hardness and direct sound duration etc. etc.
Unfortunately, there is no short cut to getting these all sorted out. Pianoteq is a hugely sophisticated emulator and it will almost certainly take you 12 months or more. I am happy to share my NV10 presets with anyone who also has a Kawai NV10 (which seems to be nobody, actually) but they are probably little use with other instruments.
In case it helps, here are some basic curves for the velocity and sustain. (You can highlight each line and do copy and paste into the screen field on Pianoteq, you don't have to type the values in by hand):
Velocity = [0, 45, 57, 68, 79, 88, 94, 99, 104, 108, 113, 116; 0, 3, 6, 12, 20, 31, 43, 55, 69, 82, 100, 114]
Velocity = [0, 45, 57, 68, 80, 90, 96, 100, 104, 107, 111, 115; 0, 1, 1, 3, 8, 24, 41, 55, 70, 83, 99, 115]
Sustain Velocity = [0, 1, 4, 32, 55, 82, 96, 111, 127; 0, 43, 86, 93, 100, 116, 123, 126, 127]
I am hoping that eventually, there will be an industry standard for "realism" and every electronic piano and software package will come with it built in. Basically, us serious keyboard users, with the current market products, are like computer users back in the 1990's having to set up their Windows 3.1 network by hand. (A horrific and degrading task which left permanent psychological scars on all who tried
pianoteq157891 wrote:Hi,
As a singer taking vocal classes since last year, I always used my HP305 digital piano to assist on learning songs. But when I discovered pianoteq last year, I became addicted to my piano, it sounds so much better so much more dynamics and feeling. I use the Steinway, Bechstein and U4 packages. I can record stuff and share it with family and im very happy with it. So I asked my vocal coach if I could sing while playing the piano on my stage performance and they were OK with that.
On my digital piano with Pianoteq I am very confident, but when I got these 5 or 10 minutes a week to play on the piano's of the acedemy, it's completely different. It's not just the keys themselves that feel different, but they feel so much louder and so much more sensitive to touch. The slighest touch produces a lot of sound. When I start playing on these with sustain pedal it's like the entire room gets resonated with way too much sound and all nuances in tiny dynamic differences go up in smoke. I need to push myself to be very gentle and soft on the keys, while still procucing sound. Teacher was not impressed.
Now I found this slider in pianoteq (I'm not technical) which says "dynamic" and if I change that from default 40db to 20db suddenly the digital piano feels more like the one in the classrooms (which are upright but also grand piano). Now I start to wonder if I could tune pianoteq so that it allows me to train as if it's a real piano, but what settings should I change there are so much, how to start. Maybe these piano packs are just too expensive piano's and I need a pack that is a cheaper piano? Any feedback is highly appreciated.