Nord Stage 4 "Triple Sensor."
-
- Posts: 62
- Joined: 27 Nov 2013, 00:40
- 11
- Your Nord Gear #1: Nord Stage 3
- Your Nord Gear #2: Nord C1
- Has thanked: 1 time
- Been thanked: 1 time
Nord Stage 4 "Triple Sensor."
What is the Nord Stage 4 "Triple Sensor" feature? I can't find anything online.
- maxpiano
- Patch Creator
- Posts: 7070
- Joined: 27 Jun 2011, 13:29
- 14
- Your Nord Gear #1: Nord Stage 3
- Location: Italy
- Has thanked: 537 times
- Been thanked: 2480 times
Re: Nord Stage 4 "Triple Sensor."
If you use the search here you can find it...
it is anyway related to the keybed, which was already like that (i.e. with triple contact) on NP5 btw.

-
- Donator
- Posts: 73
- Joined: 24 Feb 2022, 04:46
- 3
- Your Nord Gear #1: Nord Stage 3
- Your Nord Gear #2: Nord Electro 6
- Has thanked: 22 times
- Been thanked: 13 times
Re: Nord Stage 4 "Triple Sensor."
Triple sensor Keybeds are not unique to Nord. Many mid to high end digital pianos have triple sensors. Basically, a dual sensor KB has a sensor at the beginning of a key press and near the end of a key press. Thus it can determine key velocity but essentially requires the key to be completely (or nearly completely) released before it can reset for a repeat key stroke.
Acoustic grand pianos for the past 200 years or so have included a mechanical repetition mechanism. A grand piano key does not need to be fully released to re-strike a note. In an attempt to make a digital piano action more similar to a grand piano, manufacturers have added a third sensor to the key action that can sense the movement of the keystroke between the standard two sensors and well before it is fully reset which allows the Key to repeat faster.
Having said all that, having a triple sensor is just one attribute of the action that makes it more or less piano like.
Acoustic grand pianos for the past 200 years or so have included a mechanical repetition mechanism. A grand piano key does not need to be fully released to re-strike a note. In an attempt to make a digital piano action more similar to a grand piano, manufacturers have added a third sensor to the key action that can sense the movement of the keystroke between the standard two sensors and well before it is fully reset which allows the Key to repeat faster.
Having said all that, having a triple sensor is just one attribute of the action that makes it more or less piano like.
Last edited by Swampfox on 12 Mar 2023, 14:06, edited 1 time in total.
- FZiegler
- Donator
- Posts: 2881
- Joined: 15 Dec 2019, 02:41
- 5
- Your Nord Gear #1: Nord Stage 3
- Location: Germany south-west
- Has thanked: 839 times
- Been thanked: 1002 times
- Contact:
Re: Nord Stage 4 "Triple Sensor."
To find more information, you might want to search 'double escapement' which is the name for a grand's key stroke mechanism. What is special with the notes played in fast repetition is that there is no damping in between - they always sustain. That's something a digital piano will need to replicate, too.
- These users thanked the author FZiegler for the post:
- christianjwagner
Stage-3-C (Rev.B 2.1) - Kawai VPC1 / Viscount Legend 70s / Yamaha CP33 - Hall of Fame & NeoVent2 - Behringer Flow-8 - K&M stands 18820+18811 / 18953+18952 - Samsung Tab S5e, MobileSheetsPro & AirTurn Duo200 - QSC K8.2s / Fischer InEars