Hi,
Thanks a lot for the Midi Shape shifter. It works great for velocity curves !
About the VPC1 let off simulation, I may add that, as a piano student, I find it much useful when practising, because the real let off on grand pianos is really not my cup of tea and I had many trouble to deal with it when practising only on my upright piano at home.
As a recent owner of a Vpc1 (wich, by the way is a real great keyboard !), with its heavy touch (much heavier than my upright) and the let off simulation, i am now able to work a lot better.
Having said that, I will moderate my opinion about the let off. I think that it works not so bad for slow pianissimos (in fact, it's almost as annoying as in a real piano, haha, but that's what i'm looking for...).
On the other hand, one would notice that on a real piano action, the let off is not effective when you play lightly and quickly without pressing the key all the way (the hammer is then throwed by its inertia and the let off is not engaged). That's obviously not the case with the VPC1 let off, wich is effective all the time and then slow the hammer course.
This means that quick and light pianissimos (as in Mozart or Chopin's works) are very difficult to realize with this keyboard... So I will sure disengage the VPC1 let off as soon as my warenty will be off (in 3 years !) but for the design of the future vpc2 (?), maybe Kawai engineers could have a look at this...
But I still think the the Vpc1 is a bloody good keyboard :-)
Last edited by Gotacki (27-11-2013 22:13)