Zaskar wrote:In my opinion most dedicated piano controllers are overpriced compared to digital Pianos in a given price range.
Yes, he should check the drivers. Along with the volume control. He may have to produce custom velocity curves of course. There is always the possibility he's got a faulty unit too.
Indeed. Economies of scale in favour of digital pianos and the general lack of competition amongst graded hammer action MIDI controllers.
As we can see from the video done at Woody's piano shack the build quality of the A88 mkii is a grade or two above the entry-level pianos with the same action, but I know where my money would go, unless I was a touring musician I would take the cheaper plastics and just handle a cheaper digital piano a bit more carefully - then again it wouldn't get moved about much anyway.
There is a pride of ownership in owning nicely made things though. That shouldn't be underestimated. Better quality finish and solid build counts for a lot - when you've got the option to afford it.
MIDI 2.0 high resolution midi hmm, I'm not convinced high resolution would be perceptible in blind testing. The results of an improved mechanical key action on the other hand, including the fine resolution of light sensors (on other keyboards) could make all the difference, but 127 steps on a single piano key mechanism is already capable of differentiating miniscule velocity differences of a fraction of a decimal (which we can't even perceive), even with lossy velocity curves taken into account.
Add to that the blurring of the margins by playing many notes together.
That said it's one of those things that I think it would be nice to have just to say this is the 21st century, the keyboard can do it anyway.
In a nutshell I believe the qualitative difference is almost certainly entirely in the electromechanical realm not digital resolution.
Last edited by Key Fumbler (31-08-2022 13:41)