PaptainClanet wrote:SO hard to get a real thick oomph
You'll get there PaptainClanet! and Pianoteq just gets better each year in my experience In a way, it's like playing with paints and brushes until you find out how you like to paint.
I'd suggest that if you have a setting you've nearly got to where you want it but with the issues you mention (harsh mids & some ringing), maybe upload the FXP and someone might have some time to work on it further to you liking.
For harsh mids, that's typically something I might first think of attenuating for in with EQ. I know it sounds boring - but it's possibly the most simple and overlooked aspect of all audio.
A nice simple way to find offending frequencies while in Pianoteq, is to go into Effects, load an EQ3, drag the middle dot up high, then left and right until you hear clearly the frequency you don't want.. then drag that dot down below the 0.. fixed hopefully - but you can load 2 or 3 in a row to kill or boost 3 frequencies.
There are typically many alternative strategies (subtractive or additive - and adversarial staging which I enjoy, where you may EQ something up then EQ it down a little with a 2nd EQ3). For EQing, Pianoteq has both a Pre and a Post EQ setup, which is extremely useful for all kinds of thickening or thinning of any preset.
For ringing, it could be useful to change "tone" of the reverb (a slider inside the effects/reverb area) to take some treble out of it. It's possibly something overlooked a lot but often the wrong reverb tones can hurt your desired outcome - so might be best to do all your edits without reverb first and then apply various reverbs afterwards to find the ones which hurt or help your goals.
Also you could try lowering resonance duration just for some high frequencies within the new resonance tools (tabs inside the main Equalizer button).
A myriad of other things (like editing overtones in Pro) could remove some ringing.
Otherwise, it's going to be useful to spend a little time in the main EQ (it's a pre-EQ.. so changing some frequencies on that will effect all notes).. and then doing a little more with the EQ3 EQ in effects for some 'adversarial' finishing on the output signal.
For me, many of the defaults are rather oomph laden - and it's often more about attenuation than additive processing here (as much as I love to push things beyond normal for some contemporary tracks).
Others have posted before here that it's too thin
This is why a good pair of studio type monitors can help.. it's easier to tweak for something which sounds stable on those, knowing it should transfer well on other audio systems.. but if you're tweaking a preset for your speakers in your room, an FXP might really only sound good at your place.
It's a fairly good and repeat topic here - and in my sincere opinion, you can definitely make Pianoteq as thick or thin as you want even without post processing or a bunch of DAW plugins - a reason I love it so much.
In terms of our own audio system, it's a very large can of worms, and it may turn out that your browser plays audio loud by default, whilst your 'nice' audio routing for Pianoteq is set lower and just simply turning up an audio slider somewhere in your OS could be the answer, or even just by having an external audio unit with signal and master volume knobs at 12o'clock (instead of one high, the other low) might help.
Maybe this should be first - but always double/triple check what velocity curve you use. Even to this day, I will swap between a few favourite ones.. sometimes a softer sounding curve will match the preset (and feel like a softer action on an older piano) and sometimes a brighter action can bring out the tones I want at mp-mf very distinctly different - but both valid to my keyboard and desired outcome.
The beauty of Pianoteq is this fluidity - but if you want something other than defaults, it does take some time - but I'd not be alone in saying it is well worth it.
Lastly, it's always worthwhile going back to the defaults for a time, because, over a long timeline they always help bring me back to a sound which works on many systems. I can get lost making my own specific presets for tracks etc. but, standalone, many of them would sound awful as solo piano presets out of context.. but when comparing to the defaults, I can often drop lower a few of the harder tweaks and end up with a much better result.
Hope that helps somewhat, cheers - and keep at it and post your progress - there are a lot of us who delight in this aspect of Pianoteq.
Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments) - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors