Hello Patrick,
first thing: not to take anything the wrong way hopefully, we all make mistakes, I am only assuming, like me, you are human - I'm trying to kill many birds with a single posting and hopefully helping others to boot
Are you freezing any parameters?
(understand it's low chance, since you say 'as soon as I press the pedal' but worth a quick check because low hanging fruit - in case the sustain pedal was customised to swap to the harmonics pedal, frozen that way and forgotten - just a quirky possibility - these things do happen - I often will find I've made one change but forget something from an hour earlier and thus be off-track for the next hour until "OH, I put a reverb on an Aux - and forgot to turn off Pianoteq's reverb - doh..").
Have you installed the very latest "new" version - It's currently 6.4.1
If those don't resolve things..
is it possible to post a recording of the issue happening in your room?
That would probably help the most frankly.
If you suspect that your room or earphones amplify a frequency associated with pedal noise generation - jump down to the 'b)' section below.
There is a theoretical checklist infinitely long!
Things like..
1
is it happening in a DAW? If so, check if a forgotten reverb plugin is running (unseen maybe on effects send, another channel or on master?).
2
overlooked harmonic pedal, errant mouse-clicked to 'down' position.
3
have you tried lowering piano pedal noise and/or key note-off noise (Action button, appropriate sliders to the left)
4 (this is not a decoy issue - but to a degree we all have it, not certain it would explain extraordinary differences between versions.. including because may be relevant)
If Pianoteq has made noticeable change to 'pedal noise' in your setup, with the update some frequencies may be accentuating for you because maybe your room/speakers/earphones may unfortunately be annoyingly boosting just in that very range to the point of ringing/amplifying too much in a weird washy sounding way. (I wonder if I can reproduce what you hear, by increasing a narrow band of certain frequencies).
You may have the only room or headphones in the world making that pronounced sound but logic would dictate that a cure is possible, if this is the overriding issue
-- there will be so many possibilities however, so next..
daxboeck wrote:When I try to change the equalizer, it affects the complete behavior of the keys
About EQ - in Pianoteq, there are 2 EQs.. I do see occasionally some comments about EQ by users who may be under-exposed to it (even with much experience, some users may still be shooting in the dark and going by gut feel instinct or the stars - but there are some simple but effective tricks which anyone can employ!). These are not dumb tools for noobs or an 'excuse' that Pianoteq hides faults with or something quite similarly daft - which is quite ridiculous - these tools are singularly powerful and more so esp. in tandem (or in series like 3 x EQU3 = 9 bands with essentially exponential potential, giving us god-level control, probably as good as any VSTi or better, not even kidding).
Also - maybe two ways of working can quickly be described.. quick and overall, compared to clean and clinical. Sometimes to sweeten a sound, a quick overall tweak can give rough indication of what's possible, then more critical decisions can come over the top of this.. like "maybe I can acheive a better similar result by cutting only, rather than boosting" - extrapolate, adjust everything accordingly - do loop.
a)
the EQ which may be most referred to, behind the "EQUALIZER" button is a pre-eq. Think of it as a way to sweeten the piano sound parameters before that data enters the engine room. (like add some heft to the cabinet by increasing bass - long flat lines are good - maybe I might recommend lifting the bass dot a notch and lowering the treble a notch, so you have just one long tilted line - but while it may drop some treble and raise the bass, that long line should NOT make just a few key here and there suddenly wrong. Worth considering in your sound designs - you can make any key or octave totally different to another neighbour with this EQ tool. Worth keeping in mind if you want to add 'candy' to just the octaves/keys pertaining to only the melody line in a pop song etc. or authentically recreate an existing piano with such things as really different registers).
b)
the second EQ is found behind the "EFFECTS" button, it's called "EQU3" - a tri band modern EQ with Q factor (widens or narrows target frequencies) which has its claws into the audio post-engine. Using this EQ may really help if the "ringing" is room related and here's what I'd do:
In an EQU3, right-click the centre dot.
In the gain text area, type in 25 and press enter
In the Q text area, type in 25 and press enter
(click anywhere to clear away the dialogue box)
You then see the lines in the EQ chart form a sharp peak with that dot at the top.
Play a midi file (or a recently played segment) via the player and grab the dot with the mouse and drag it left and right until you are certain that you hear that problem frequency amplified until it makes you want to tip the table - exacting issues should be really clearly identifiable using this method.
Next back in the right-click dialogue box again;
In the gain text area, type in -25
In the Q text area, make no change
Now you should see a downwardly flipped version of the first upwards peaking graph.
You've essentially surgically removed or trimmed (with your very own designer notch filter!) only that narrow range - just tweak the numbers above to adjust better to suit room conditions - you may not need/want to remove the entire frequency, just soften instead by lowering the Q factor to say 15 or the gain only down to -10 - whatever works. It's my experience, that it's easier to find frequency issues by using a boosted band first, then flipping it down - it's more hit-and-miss IMO if you begin with a lowered notch. Some might prefer to just notch it first though. Whatever works etc.. YMMV.
Hope that helps - if not - certainly more info (PC, audio type - incl. internal or external unit, speakers/headphones, something about the room maybe, plus whatever comes to mind as relevant).
Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments) - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors