Topic: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

So, about to take the plunge and buy a keyboard. Spent half a day at Rose Morris trying a variety of Kawai and Roland keyboards, and I think I've settled on the Kawai CN33. Has anyone here tried it? It has the new RH action with letoff, and I did prefer it to the MP5, which felt a bit bouncy to me. The Rolands were too light for my taste. The other great thing about the CN33 is that it is a home digital, so it is nice and solid to play (no wobbly stand) and has THREE PEDALS, which I loved. there was also a CN23 which has RH without letoff, and I couldn't really feel the difference. One problem I had was that I haven't played properly for several years, and so my touch was much less sensitive than I'm used to, and I found judging the touch harder than I expected. So I could go for the CN23 for nearly £250 less; but would I regret this once my hands are run in a bit? Any thoughts? I won't be going back to the shop for a few weeks as I'm working out of town.
Incidentally, Rose Morris are selling an ex demo V piano for £3500 if anyone wants to go over to the dark side. I asked them what the response was to it and they said that generally people liked the sound of it, but didn't feel it was £3000 better sounding than the MP7 II, and where were all the other sounds? Suffice it to say they hadn't sold a single one, thus the cheap price, I imagine. I tried it myself. It has a lovely touch, but not a particularly great sound, especially the bass, which is oddly booming, more like a bad imitation of a plucked double bass than a piano.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

CN33 looks real nice!

http://www.kawai.de/grafik/cn33w.jpg

http://www.kawai.de/grafik/cn33sb.jpg



And actually I played a V-Piano for real, and the "ivory touch" action, as Roland toutes it, was to me really... awfully sucky! Really! My 100 years old upright has better keybed than that one!

Hell, Korg M3-88 has a better keybed (RH3)!



My suggestion: go for the CN33. The white one.

Last edited by EvilDragon (04-09-2010 19:46)
Hard work and guts!

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Ahhh, a white piano; it had never occurred to me...

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

For those Beatles fans out there, John Lennon played a white piano for the 'Imagine' video.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

They release a white and a black piano cause if they went just to a white one, they could be accused of racism.
And if the white piano got just a few simple featue more than the black one have...   

In a close future all piano releases will need to have a white, a black and a pink piano, to do not offend as racism or homophobia.


Welcome to the "politically correct" world.

Last edited by Beto-Music (07-09-2010 06:04)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Don't forget to check out the Yamaha series of self-contained keyboards that look similar to the products you have described above.  There is a YDP (Yamaha Digital Piano) series and the more expensive Clavinova CLP (more piano-oriented) and CVP (piano, synth, rhythmic pattern oriented).

Hope this helps.

Cheers,

Joe

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

EvilDragon wrote:

And actually I played a V-Piano for real, and the "ivory touch" action, as Roland toutes it, was to me really... awfully sucky! Really! My 100 years old upright has better keybed than that one!

Hell, Korg M3-88 has a better keybed (RH3)!

Hello mr.Dragon,

Can you be little more specific about "awfully sucky ivory touch"? V-piano has PHA III keyboard which is supposed to be improvement over PHA II which I have in my RD700GX. To my fingers PHA II "feels" good: I'm not sure about the "ivory" feel but the general feeling is nice. The main thing is this escapement which simulates real grand piano touch. Problematic thing with PHA II is its performance in fast repetitions: I find it little difficult to play fast staccatos etc. But I've heard this is the one things Roland has tried to improve with (V-piano) PHA III - in fact many guys on the net appraise V-piano for this feature!

I think goodness or badness of PHA III is interesting for many of us because Rolands newest line uses same keybed: RD700NX, new FP and some HP -pianos too.

I don't personally remember any problematic with V-piano (PHA III) but it was some time ago when tested it and I didn't pay attention to touch that much. What I'd like to know is that do other people share mr.Dragons opinion about the PHA III...?

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

I played it for about 10 minutes in a music shop and thought it was pretty good - certainly closer to a real grand piano action than anything else I'd tried (which, admittedly, isn't that much)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

I just didn't like the feel of the keys. I think that by simulating the "ivory touch" they did perhaps good for some people, bad for some. To me, the surface of the keys is really unpleasant to play.

Also the keys still don't repeat as fast as I'd want them to. Meh..

Hard work and guts!

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

I had the same experience as EvilDragon re: the PHAIII repetition rate. I was using alternating hands and playing quite forte, and it didn't impress me as much as I was expecting it to.  It may be that pianissimo repetition is very good but I did not attempt to test for that. I was testing in a store, though, and it'a always tricky to do proper testing when rushed. (and I ALWAYS feel rushed in stores).  At the same time I tested a Kawai CN-22, which has a middle-of-the-road-action as far as Kawai actions go as I understand it, and I thought it repeated better than the Roland. (I haven't tried the very best Kawai actions yet)

When I do the same test on even a lowly upright acoustic piano, it all just works fine.  Digital piano actions seem to have mechanical resonances - you can often get a short burst of rapid notes out, but then it will trip over itself.  I just didn't have this problem on the upright.

I would like an "ivory feel" keyboard though.

Greg.

Last edited by skip (07-09-2010 22:08)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

PunBB bbcode test

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Fast repetition seems to be difficult to many weighted hammer action keyboards. For example new korg sv has been said to be too slow responding. Still I play maybe  99% something else than fast fortissimo repetitions. That's why many other things are important too when choosing keyboard (and now we're not speaking those sound qualities and functions etc.); main thing is the "feeling" and expressiveness which are subjective of course. IMO even my PHA II is better than many many competetitors (unfortunately I haven't tried Kawais); Roland feels like a grand piano. If I was only after fast repetitions then I'd take my Nord Electro (springy organ keyboard), but certainly it's not a piano (in fact I have been forced to use it about 20 gigs per year as my only keyboard...)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

A digital keyboard can be better than a real good piano keyboard action. 

But perhaps the purpose of a digital keyboard try imitate the "deffect" of a real piano action, it's to avoid the player to get used with the easier way.

Supose you practice a lot in a perfect digital keyboard, light weight, no "ticks" of scapment, no problem in very fast repetion...     When you get the real thing you may find difficult, as was used to a "perfect keyboard".

The perfect  kind of "perfect digital keyboard" would be one that allow to ajust the degree or even disable some function, like scapment or extra weight keys.
No manufactuer got that, I think.

But Petrof pianos, real pianos, have a patented system that allow to adjust the weight of the keys.
It works using the force of combined magnets to reduce the weight of keys (same charge together create repulsion force). When the angle of magnets are changed the reductioin of weight is changed. 
The keyboard have three points along the length, so you can adjust differently for bass, middle range and treble.

Petrof also use magnets in other location of the action, to create a acellerated action. I don't know if you will spot the magnets, but it's in this picture:


PunBB bbcode test

Look in the metal strip, there are to oposed magnets bellow each small wood piece.

I supose the inicial kint, or the inicial necessaryenergy to move the hammer, became lower, while after some milimiter apart the magnets help became insignificant, and so helps creating a fast action.

The magnets that reduce key weight (MAGNETIC BALANCED PIANO ACTION) are in a diferent location. 
I think the magnetic accelerated action can't be disabled like the magnetic balanced piano action.

Last edited by Beto-Music (08-09-2010 18:50)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Pretty impressive Beto - thanks!  Seiler also use magnetic force to improve the repetition rate of their upright pianos, apparently:
http://www.seiler-pianos.de/eng/technik/home.htm

Greg.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

jcfelice88keys wrote:

Don't forget to check out the Yamaha series of self-contained keyboards that look similar to the products you have described above.  There is a YDP (Yamaha Digital Piano) series and the more expensive Clavinova CLP (more piano-oriented) and CVP (piano, synth, rhythmic pattern oriented).

Hope this helps.

Cheers,

Joe

I've tried all of the Yamahas in my price range and I really didn't like the action; they felt strangely springy to me. Thanks for the advice, though. Actually the look doesn't bother me, although a part of me (the push-button-flashing-lights part of me) regrets not getting a stage piano, but the CN33 has the latest action AND three pedals, and those are the primary concerns for me.

Last edited by benormerod (09-09-2010 14:21)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

EvilDragon wrote:

I just didn't like the feel of the keys. I think that by simulating the "ivory touch" they did perhaps good for some people, bad for some. To me, the surface of the keys is really unpleasant to play.

Also the keys still don't repeat as fast as I'd want them to. Meh..

I agree about the feel of the keys; it's very strange texture, like some kind of porous stone. I likes the action though, although I didn't spend long on it as I wasn't intending to buy it.

Last edited by benormerod (09-09-2010 14:27)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

lol well isn't "like porus stone" exactly what ivory is supposed to be like? It helps absorb grease and sweat from the players fingers.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

But it definitely didn't feel as real ivory keys. It was too much like sandpaper even. I couldn't play on those. And my upright has real ivory keys, so I should know at least...

Hard work and guts!

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

EvilDragon wrote:

But it definitely didn't feel as real ivory keys. It was too much like sandpaper even. I couldn't play on those. And my upright has real ivory keys, so I should know at least...

I agree; more like fine pumice stone than ivory.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Women pianists can use V-piano to polish their nails, while making glissando.
Há háaaa háaaaa...

About real Ivory keys, maybe new and old Ivories have different texture. Old ivories already absorbed a lot of oil and sweat from fingers.
Ivory was forbiden many years ago, and most today are from vintage pianos.

Make a test. Send just one ivory key, piano action piece, to clean and polish, and if it got more rought in touch, thats how a new ivory would feel.

PunBB bbcode test



Discussion about Ivory X Plastic:

http://www.pianoworld.com/forum/ubbthre...127/1.html

Interesthing : 

"I greatly prefer new, good quality plastic key covers to most old ivory key covers. When Ivory is in like new condition, that is my favorite.
Most older ivory key tops feel dry and slippery, and nothing like the way they felt when in new condition. New condition ivory actually feels more like the synthetic ivory of today and less like old ivory."

Last edited by Beto-Music (10-09-2010 18:43)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Seems Roland HP307 have the PHAIII as the V-Piano,
but it costs around 2700€.
Maybe HP307+Pianoteq would be a good deal..

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Check it out:

http://www.roland.com/products/en/RD-700NX/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=58sjUdW5UgY

Roland RD-700NX have PHA-III ivory fell keyboard.

I supose Roland let PHA-III be exclusive of V-Piano, for more than a year, just to persuade people to buy it, and only now release PHA-III for other models.

Price $2,599.00 dollars.

Last edited by Beto-Music (11-09-2010 02:12)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Thanks beto-music for this info, very usefull.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

If Roland made a cheaper one without the bloody "Hundreds of built-in sounds: 242 normal tones, 10 Tone Wheel organs, 256 GM2 tones, 5 rhythm sets, and 9 GM2 rhythm sets" I might buy it!

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

feline1 wrote:

If Roland made a cheaper one without the bloody "Hundreds of built-in sounds: 242 normal tones, 10 Tone Wheel organs, 256 GM2 tones, 5 rhythm sets, and 9 GM2 rhythm sets" I might buy it!

hehehe.. That amused me because I thought you were exaggerating about the built in sounds, but then I realised you quoting the specs! Oh dear how wrong can a manufacturer get it. Why go the whole hog on the keyboard action for a studio synth or home entertainment toy.. really, overkill.

I'm trying to source a good second hand Yamaha GT2 to go with Pianoteq (Ebay has a couple which I am keeping an eye on). Why? One built in sound which is 10 years old and obsolete, BUT a REAL grand piano action, and optical key and pedal sensors giving continuous pedalling on sustain and shift, plus a decent 2x60 watt amp and speakers built in to a conventional looking baby grand cabinet. Perfect for Pianoteq... and about 8 times cheaper than an Avantgrand.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

The RD-700NX is a professional stage piano, and I think it's fantastic that it now has Roland's best hammer action.   Also, there is a cheaper model with a very similar action - the FP-7F.   

Greg.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

skip wrote:

The RD-700NX is a professional stage piano, and I think it's fantastic that it now has Roland's best hammer action.   Also, there is a cheaper model with a very similar action - the FP-7F.   

Greg.

It still costs £1,500 in the UK, and is jam-packed with pointless features I don't want!

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

If you watched the video I posted, in 1:22 you can haerd the plastic sound of the  RD-700NX .

Why to get so much instruments, if each one sounds poor ?

Last edited by Beto-Music (11-09-2010 23:24)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Beto-Music wrote:

If you watched the video I posted, in 1:22 you can haerd the plastic sound of the  RD-700NX .

Why to get so much instruments, if each one sounds poor ?

Come on, have you really tried these new piano sounds? I have RD700GX with same supernatural expansion inside it, and I have closely listened to it against Pianoteq, Ivory, Nord Piano, Yamaha S70SX and I can tell you that it's not bad at all... In fact it's very good and VERY playable. But of course finally it's the matter of taste.

I have seen the whole development of RD-series: my first RD was this 600 then 700, 700SX and now 700GX. And I can tell you that it's quite a progress. Let's see & hear if new 700NX can give something worth upgrading for those of us that have 700GX (that's the main question for me personally).

Anyway I think many of those Roland critics - on this forum I can see many of them - base their negative opinion to past: there was a time when for example Yamaha was clearly better but not anymore (and now I'm comparing things with same price range)..

To my fingers - which are used to my GX (also my acoustic Kawai) - even those new Yamaha CPs felt plastic and cheap and I don't even wanna to speak about new Nord Piano (it's light years far from this league). I haven't had chance to test Kawai MP8 but to me this extra 10kg is anyway too much: their (presumably) realistic piano action takes lot of space and lot of weight. You cannot have everything. For me it's a kind of surprise that Roland has managed to put PHA III to this RD size; I thought that V-pianos size and weight is based on this new hammer action. Anyway I think V-piano is a prototype and maybe they have found a way to put it smaller baggage, I don't know....

Last edited by Ecaroh (12-09-2010 01:18)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

the V-piano probably just has some tungsten blocks inside to make it really heavy and justify costing £4grand

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

I think the V-Piano's action (PHAIII) is just the PHAII (with escapement) plus the third sensor.  I also think it's a minor miracle that Roland have put the PHAIII in the lower cost products.  Yamaha do not put their tri-sensor action in ANY "slab" style keyboard yet - I wonder whether they will follow suit?

Greg.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Hey guys, I'm rebuilding my grandmother's baby grand with irovy + ebony keys, and wanted to replace the action with a kawai ABS action, but now coming here, I see some interesting posts with some companies trying to get faster repetition rates. I plan on retrofitting the shell of the old baby grand to be midi-compatible so I can use it with Pianoteq.

Are there any companies out there that will sell just the action? I found some Kawai dealers but it's quite difficult to buy just the action, for a different piano. I'm now starting to look at other piano manufacturers. I liked the idea of getting ABS hammers due to their longevity. The piano manufactuer is Murdoch (London), which was bombed to smithereens in the blitz in WW2, so it's kind of hard to get replacement parts, hehe.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Go to the German embassy in London and ask them to sort it out in that case :0)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

All the talk in this thread about the Roland action convinced me to spend more time on the Roland keyboards when I went back to Rose Morris after a week in Derby. I also got some practice on a lovely Bechstein Grand in Derby, not unlike the one I learnt on as a child (which had been rescued from a pub where it was being used as a bar and given to my grandfather as a 21st birthday present just after WW1). What a pleasure that was; and good to be reminded of the lighter touch of those prewar pianos. When I went back to Rose Morris I found the heavy touch of the Kawai rather irksome, and spent a morning going between the V-piano and the CN33. Oddlly, although the Kawai felt more like a real piano, I found that I played much better on the Roland; and during lunch I reflected that given the choice I wouldn't touch a real kawai with a bargepole, so why would I want a digital that copied one? I had a series of meetings in the West End, and went back in between, trying all the Rolands, and found myself having the most fun on the HP302. Reader, I bought it. I suppose I could've saved money going online, but after those many hours trailing my macbook around the showroom it seemed the decent thing to do. Delivery next weekend.

Last edited by benormerod (18-09-2010 17:01)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

I have some doubts about the fast repetition that so many ones talk about.

May I ask a example of music, a mp3, or a video, showing what kinf of fast repetition it's so important or dificult to do ?
I presume its something really fast.

Do you also find any problems about fast repetion on good quality digital hammer action keyboards, or just in real piano keyboads ?

I'm asking that cause there are many incredible fast old classic music, with fast repetion of the same key. If the keyboads of pianos 120 years ago wasn't able of such thing, I supose the music wouldn't be written like that.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

No, we're talking about how digital weighted key action permits a far slower repetition rate than are required by certain fast classical or jazz pieces.

You can't really work around the fact that the piece calls for playing a trill but your keyboard can't keep up. Some real pianos suck in this department too, but most are much better than almost all digital pianos in this respect (as far as I have been able to tell. I can't trill super super fast, but there isn't a single MIDI keyboard I've found that is as good as even a mediocre piano in this respect).

It's something to think about when buying. Some people want even their real pianos to go even faster, which rapidly approaches the point of dimishing returns, but if playing fast is your thing, why should your instrument limit you? Just because Bach didn't think of it, doesn't mean we shouldn't.

In terms of heavy / light actions...well in one interview of Richter I read a long time ago, heavy actions are good for training your finger strength for speed and co-ordination, kind of like professional runners who run with weights on. When you take the weights off, it gives you a speed / control boost because you're used to the heavier action.

Practicing on a bunch of different pianos is probably the best way to do it. //my amateur opinion

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Why do you dislike Kawai's so much? The action? The sound?

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Me ? I like it, but it's not quite there yet in terms of comparison. FYI I own the MP8-ii. I plan on upping the action of my baby grand to the action of Kawai's RX-Blak when I get in touch with a guy who can make it happen. So I do like Kawais, both digital and acoustic very much so.

(darn companies, you'd think they would jump at the chance to sell stuff to enthusiasts and hobbyists). If not, too bad for them, I'll buy an action from somebody else. (this is for a real piano, not a digital. well, it'll end up being a hybrid). That's why I'm real pleased to read this thread, it seems other companies are indeed working on faster grand piano actions.

Last edited by rlburnside (18-09-2010 20:55)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

No, no. It was benormerod who said that he "wouldn't touch a real kawai with a bargepole."

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Jake, many times people said that scapments made fast repetition difficult, ant the lack of such thing in most hammare action digital keyboards was a advantage.

Last edited by Beto-Music (18-09-2010 22:08)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Well done Ben! (Benormerod).

I hope you think that was 6-8 weeks trialling well spent from thinking about buying one and actually buying one. I hope you are pleased with your purchase.

If you remember I identified with your initial posts because I am going down a similar path but on a different budget..

Well, since then my budget plans have changed (I am going to save up a lot more money than I originally planned) because I haven't been happy with any digital pianos/ keyboards I have tried except for one - Yamaha's Avantgrand. No, I am not going to buy one of those, why would anyone really?? But the predecessor to that piano, the GT2, has the same action: an action which I really liked when sitting at the Avantgrand N2 they have in Chappell's on Wardour Street, its a real grand's action. The next best was the Mp8 II, but a GT2 can be had second hand for about the same as a new Kawai, plus it has pedals (soft and sustain capable of continuous detection) a nice cabinited and some proper amplification. Makes it ideal for hooking up to Pianoteq.

Oh I wish Modartt's fellows would commission some manufacturer like Kawai or Yamaha to produce something like the GT2 (not that Petrof madness someone posted about a while back, ugly brute of a thing that is) but without any internal sounds and 4 pedals so we can really utilise the harmonics pedal..? Perhaps with a sound module built in and Pianoteq preloaded, I know, I am being silly. I'll shut up now.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

EdinKent, I posted about Petrof, but that was a real gand piano and not a midi controler with real grand action.   

Anyway would be a good idea to develope a midi controller with real grand action, for pianoteq.

I was thinking...  How works the sensor of a good Hammer Action digital piano ?  They are much cheaper than the expensive retrofit sensor system selled apart.
Perhaps could be possible use the nor so expansive standart sensor of digital pianos, in a project of real grand action copntroller, making it affordable.

Does Anybody here have a schematic, blue print or something, that shows the sensors in a typical quality progressive hammer action digital piano ?


There is a piano factory on Brazil, Fritz Dobert, and they also resell grand pianos form Kawai, real and digital models, and of course their own brands.
I once tought about suggest this idea, but my email got no reurn.

Last edited by Beto-Music (18-09-2010 22:42)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Oh Hi Beto-Music, was that you? Sorry I thought it was this you were talking about..

http://www.petrof.com/midi-grand-piano-all.html

Ugly, but somehow nice. As far as I can see though its a midi controller.

I have to go now, I am being called to make coffee.. I'll read the rest of your post tomorrow - looks interesting..ah well.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

How hard can it be? If the retrofit solution is too expensive I'll just make my own. Or perhaps as a DIY project that we can all collaborate on. (quick thought : there are probably people who have already done this, a google search should find some).

Midi is a very open standard (I wrote a functional parser for use in a video game in about two days), hook up a potentiometer or some type of optical sensors and then comes the tweaking. Shouldn't be too difficult. (famous last words, I know...)

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

You can also check this out: http://www.qrsmusic.com/pianomation-p.asp?pid=3382


Put it on any real grand piano action and off you go.

Hard work and guts!

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

PNOscanTM MIDI Record Strip it's also more expansive than most medium prise digital pianos.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

True, but if you really want that real piano touch, you don't ask for the price.

Hard work and guts!

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

Jake Johnson wrote:

Why do you dislike Kawai's so much? The action? The sound?

Well, that was a careless thing to say; but I did say  "given the choice"! I once worked on a show that had as its set two Steinway concert grands, both tuned by a Steinway engineer, and I spent most of my time playing them. Or rather one of them; one was an American Steinway, one was a German Steinway... The thing I remember about the experience was that it was as if I'd been practicing solidly for three months; suddenly passages that had been problematic fell under my hands with ease. A few pianos have given me something close to that experience since, but none of them have been a Kawai, which in comparison to the Bosendorfers and Bechsteins that I've tried before and since have felt like just another piano, and crucially haven't given me as much pleasure as my trusty Danemann upright. So I suppose what I meant is if someone offered to exchange my upright for a Kawai grand I'd probably say no. And I think that in the end it's the action that I don't like, but I'm afraid I wasn't terribly analytical about it at the time.

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

I played several of modern Kawai uprights. Bloody awesome they were. I guess it's totally subjective.

Hard work and guts!

Re: Kawai, Roland (and the V Piano)

I like the sound of Kawai uprights, too. Never played one of their grands. But their "stage pianos," which presumably have samples from their grands, sound good to me.  As the dragon sayeth...