Lewthepianoguy wrote:anotherscott wrote:my question was "Do you know anyone who has ever run out of polyphony at 120 on a Nord?" i.e. one of the newer models, which you were saying is still inadequate
I did not say that the stage 3 is inadequate, far from it. just saying that when it comes more to the sample synth behaviour more than anything, polyphony is starved.
My 120 poly comment was in response to where you had said, "Take the Piano 4...It's a piano with 120 note poly. Ideally let's see the Piano 4 with 256 note poly" -- I was just saying I see no issues with the 120. Remember also that many boards have a single engine for everything, so for example, layered strings or an organ split cut into available piano polyphony. That doesn't happen on the Nord, where the piano has 120 polypony of its own, no matter what additional non-piano split/layered sounds you are using.
Lewthepianoguy wrote:It doesn't make much sense to have 120 note poly for the piano engine, then far less for the sample side and worse for the synthesis side.
VA synthesis uses different technology than sample playback, its requirements are different, and it is common for it to have less polyphony. (And at least in the case of the NS3, the non-piano sample side is the same as the synth side, which is what gives us the cool ability to process the samples through the synth functions). Remember, the NS3 synth is almost an A1, which has 26 polyphony. This isn't just a Nord thing, look at other VA synths like King Korg, Studiologic Sledge, Waldorf Blofeld, Roland System 8... all with polyphony of 25 or less. (Though there are some with more as well.) The new Yamaha MODX has half the polyphony for ts FM synthesis engine as it does for everything else. The point is, it can make sense to have different polyphonies for different sound engines, because the tech requirements for these things are different.
Lewthepianoguy wrote:OK, saying that, a Stage 4 which is expanded upon, instead of 2 panels (A and B, what about 4 which makes better sense for multi layering / instrument control, etc.
Interestingly, I remember reading somewhere that there was a design choice where the Stage 3 could have either had more panels or seamless sound transitions, and they chose the latter.