On Sun, 2003-06-15 at 05:24, Brian Redfern wrote:
Sounds like your keyboard is dying, or has something
essentially broken,
you might want to look around your local area for someone to fix it, or
think about getting a midi controller that's new, you can get just a
keyboard controller for under $100, probably less than it would cost to
get yours fixed. I used to have an ensoniq mirage that started to slowly
die and stuff went weird like that, until eventually it just died
altogether.
Wow.. doesn't give Ensoniq (now aka EMU & Creative) a good wrap..
The closest I have had to any hardware gear dieing is an output port
going a bit dodgy on a Yamaha DX-27 (fixed with a bit of solder) and a
button dieing on an RX-5 drum machine.. Oh yeah and losing one of the
rubber bits from the hammer of a Rhodes piano
Never lost a whole machine..
On Sat, 14 Jun 2003, Ryan Underwood wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I have a MIDI card (Yamaha DB50XG) that I use as a performer for my old
> Ensoniq controller. It works fine. However, it seems that the Ensoniq
> keyboard sends the velocity information at only half what it should be
> -- if I pound on the keyboard, the volume is increased from normal
> playing, but still rather quiet. If I play a midi file through tse3play
> or something similar, the volume is full.
>
> To get around this problem, I have two sysex files; I cat
> volume_high.syx > /dev/midi when I want to use the keyboard, and cat
> volume_low.syx > /dev/midi when I want to play midi files. The sysex's
> each set the midi master volume to a level which is comfortable to use
> with either.
>
> However, this feels like a kludge. In addition, sometimes annoying
> things happen like after I've been playing the keyboard at its
> comfortable volume, I visit a web page with a MIDI on it, and it plays
> at 250% volume and blasts my ear out. Or I play a game like DOOM which
> has hardware MIDI support and have to lunge for the volume on my mixer
> to keep from disturbing the neighbours. :)
>
> The keyboard is a Ensoniq SDP-1 from 1986 or so. I tried the volume
> setting on the keyboard in the hopes that it would modify the volume of
> the notes sent to the midi card, but it seems to have no effect. (Is it
> broken possibly?)
>
> I was thinking about hacking the mpu401 driver so that when midi data is
> received externally, it rewrites the velocity somehow before it reaches
> the midi device. Or if that isnt possible, when a file is played to
> /dev/midi, after the file sets master volume, reset it to a lower value.
>
> Thoughts? Suggestions? This has been annoying me for a while now. :)
>
> Thanks,
> --
> Ryan Underwood, <nemesis at icequake.net>, icq=10317253
>
--
Allan Klinbail <allank(a)labyrinth.net.au>