My thoughts...
It sounds like you are getting amplified "Mechancial Noise" Samples. E.g. the recorded "Thock" of a wooden key hitting its hammer and base.
This maybe because you changed the Sensitivity to "Soft", or it maybe that you have altered a Factory performance and accidentally bumped up the "Mechanical" Samples level, either directly with "Levels" or perhaps more likely, with Velocity to Level Modulation of some sort.
A common problem with the MODX Pianos is that they were "designed" on the Montage... with an entirely different Keybed. It's calibrated differently.
Q: Does this happen on Factory Pianos, or only ones you have modified?
IMO the best method to alleviate the velocity calibration deficit on the MODX, is to use the "Velocity Depth" and "Velocity Offset" parameters. Unfortunately you have to re-set these per Part, so it's a little tedious, but definitely improves calibration.
It sounds like you are getting amplified "Mechancial Noise" Samples. E.g. the recorded "Thock" of a wooden key hitting its hammer and base.
This maybe because you changed the Sensitivity to "Soft", or it maybe that you have altered a Factory performance and accidentally bumped up the "Mechanical" Samples level, either directly with "Levels" or perhaps more likely, with Velocity to Level Modulation of some sort.
A common problem with the MODX Pianos is that they were "designed" on the Montage... with an entirely different Keybed. It's calibrated differently.
Q: Does this happen on Factory Pianos, or only ones you have modified?
IMO the best method to alleviate the velocity calibration deficit on the MODX, is to use the "Velocity Depth" and "Velocity Offset" parameters. Unfortunately you have to re-set these per Part, so it's a little tedious, but definitely improves calibration.
Statistics: Posted by TooTone — Sun May 26, 2024 12:52 pm