Can you please show this to me in writing where it says so on their website.anotherscott wrote:All the Nord pianos until the XL have always been stretched. All the Nord pianos, including the XL, are looped rather than fully sampled (as is every piano in every other keyboard, except for Korg Kronos and Krome which sample the full length, and numerous Roland SuperNatural which samples only a portion and then models the rest). And not a single keyboard samples a piano at every single velocity that the human hand is capable of triggering a real piano at. Nor every possible resonance. All samples are incomplete simulations and always have been. Honestly, I find the "violation of trade description" premise pretty ridiculous.jazzystu wrote:I do think Nord are amazing but in this case, I am merely irritated by the fact that they appear (well, some suggest) the EPs are partially stretched and modelled
Where did you get the impression that Nord uses modeling? I've never heard that. Since modeling is a way to get more realistic characteristics from a smaller amount of sample data, it might be cool if they did, but I don't think they do. Roland does it with SuperNATURAL pianos (FP series, RD series, Jupiter, Integra), Yamaha does it with the SCM pianos (CP1/5/50), and Korg does it with their EPs (but not APs) in the Kronos, but I don't think Nord does it anywhere in their pianos.
But as I've said before, if someone really needs better EPs, get them elsewhere, don't wait for Nord. Even if Nord comes out with a couple of 200 mb EPs tomorrow, they still may not be to your taste! And there are plenty of good EPs you can get in computer VSTs, sound modules, and other keyboards that you can trigger from your Nord today. It's great that Nord keeps coming out with updates, but you should make sure a board has the sounds you need out of the of the box on the day you buy it, because there are never any guarantees about the future. If you bought a Nord for its EPs and you don't like them, then you didn't properly eval the board before you bought it.
I am not a computer nerd. I sold my Hammond C3/Leslie 147, Rhodes Suitcase 88, Clavinet D6, Wurlitzer EP200a, Minimoog Model D and bought a nord because I read quite clearly that they had "optimised a 1976 Stage Piano for bassy response"
I am totally not with you when you say "Well, it was quite clear that everything but the XL pianos were modelled on a half sampled semi-hat off to the original".
This is totally not the case.
Since we are having an argument and it's based on facts and "what a realistic person would expect to be the case" with regards to the "advert". I'd appreciate it if you could add more than rhetoric.
Since I have the prejudice that you can't and all your input is toady bullshit, I would really like you to prove me wrong.
Over to you.