T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1291.1 | Vermont has it now. | FROST::HARRIMAN | I am not a technovangelist | Fri Apr 01 1988 09:10 | 66 |
|
Advance Music in Burlington had a clinic for it (and yes, it has
arrived here in VT) on Wednesday. I was going to start a new topic
this morning but you beat me to it, Dave.
After spending two hours getting demoed, I'm not so sure about the
S-550... Nice instrument.
I got some close up views, here's a quick run-through:
It is a 20 voice, 8 "instrument" instrument.
This means you can use up to 8 MIDI channels separately and reassign
voices as needed. Keyboard has new aftertouch like SQ-80. All menu
driven, naturally. Sounds EXTREMELY clean. Sample rates from 6.25K
to 52.1K. 40 selectable sample rates (s-550 has 2). Starts with
a half-meg of memory, expandable to 2 meg. On-board disk, full MIDI
storage capability. Reads and converts Mirage disks!
Also:
It has a whole bunch of somewhat intelligent looping algorithms
built in. Sampling on it was extremely fast - hook up a mike, punch
up the sample page, set the levels, ccapture the sample, and punch
a few buttons to set up a loop. Took less than 3 minutes to tune
the sample and loop it and make it sound nifty too.
It actually has three playback modes, 20 voice @31.2KHz, to 12 voices
@52KHz...
It has a D-type connector on the back for an expander which allows
8 separate outputs. Not available until May.
Each wavesample is separately modifiable. You may have 8 loaded
in the machine at a time. You may play while loading. Awesome.
It has a sequencer, as if this wasn't enough. The sequencer is better
than the SQ-80 (ESQ V3.5)...80,000 notes for the base unit, if you
get memory expansion then it is only limited by memory (you share
with sample memory). Adjustable click!!!!! and you can put it out
it's own output (when they get the expander box to market)...
Step editing...etc. 20 voices per track. It has somewhat less song
capability (1) as opposed to the SQ-80. Midi implemetation is scary.
It supports simultaneous MIDI in, out for separate instruments,
and up to 8 MIDI zones on the keyboard.
The disk system allows subdirectories, sysex dumps from other machines,
and variable-size files with names, even. DMA access (which is why
the thing can play while loading).
not-so-good things:
If you buy a memory expander you cannot get more memory without
throwing out the other expander (one, count 'em, one, slot). Due
to the scarceness of 1Mx16 chips, they said the availability of
the 2 MEG expander was pushed out probably til August.
It's a 13 bit cruncher. They say it does 24 bit internal processing
but the sampler is 13 bit. 96db dynamic range. I could not hear
any discernable noise other than the usual sample aliasing which
can be filtered out.
The price is about 2K up here (list). I suspect no great deals on
this in Vermont anyway.
/pjh
|
1291.2 | 13 bits? gawd. nice round number... | JON::ROSS | shiver me timbres.... | Fri Apr 01 1988 10:57 | 7 |
| dont expect deals anywhere!!!
you said something about "8 samples at once".....
this means 8 different voices WITH multisamples across the
range (how many?) NOT just 8 samples total (!?!) doesnt it?
|
1291.3 | Unimpressed | NAC::PICKETT | David - Dept. of Redundancy Dept. | Fri Apr 01 1988 15:45 | 19 |
| Hmm... I was left wanting.
Perhaps the EPS at Daddy's in Nausea didn't have the memory expansion,
but when I tried the factory samples, I couldn't fit more than two
woices at once in the darn thing. Ayuh, you can play and load. Nice.
Keyboard stinks, plain and simple. Ensoniq is making a bigger mistake
than they can imagine by not offering a rack mount version. (Maybe
they'll really screw things up, and make a keyboardless version,
and let Alesis design the packaging! ;^)
I though the factory samples stunk. I'm sure it's capable of much
more. Drum kit was cute, Rock piano stunk, the Digital Piano didn't
sound much better than my ESQ-1. Mirage samples will be a plus.
The dope at Daddy's didn't know how much it was selling for. 'Duh,
we just got it in today. Hey, wanna check out this strat?'
dp
|
1291.4 | was that Daddy's or whut? | FROST::HARRIMAN | I am not a technovangelist | Fri Apr 01 1988 17:44 | 40 |
|
re: .2
and I quote: "and the ability to have 127 distinct samples in each
of the 8 instruments on the keyboard at one time".
Also "20 voices, dynamically assigned".
What it means is that you can press up to 20 keys and get something
out. Second, you can stack instruments so that more than one voice
is assigned to a key (less voices), or you can multi-sample (more
timbres).
re: .3
I dunno, I had a demonstration from someone from Ensoniq. He admitted
they didn't have many samples, but he did play the harpsichord.
It was very good - they have the sound of the quill coming back
to the string on the aftertouch for instance. Very realistic (and
I have heard and played many harpsichords in my life). Maybe Daddy's
just doesn't know how to operate it yet, no?
Yes, I regret not having a rack mount version. The Ensoniq rep lamented
the fact that people didn't buy them (the ESQ-M was an economic
disaster apparently for Ensoniq) so they're pretty shy about them
now. The quantity of samples in memory is a function of how big
the samples are in the first place. The mirage samples (I heard
the Mirage piano in the EPS) aren't bad, it still sounds like the
Mirage piano but it was considerably brighter and for some reason
I didn't hear the aliasing as much (I don't understand why, if the
sound was brighter then I should have heard it. Was it the extra
bit? ???)
Well the people at Advance Music here let me read the manuals and
sit in the back room. I'm going down Saturday to get a better look.
I'll report back, again...
Happy Easter
/pjh
|
1291.5 | yet more choices... | FROST::HARRIMAN | I am not a technovangelist | Mon Apr 04 1988 10:22 | 101 |
|
I have in front of me three manuals... The S-550, the Korg ESS-1,
and the Ensoniq EPS.
Peter Wilder at Advance Music was kind enough to spend over an hour
with me walking me through the different instruments. nd he let
me take the manuals to read through too.
So anyway... maybe we can roll through this quickly. What follows
is a not-too-complete comparison of EPS, 550 and -1, with some pretty
subjective comments thrown in.
Ensoniq EPS: Manual is in English, typeset on a MAC again. The manual
is a whopping 52 pages (and the price on the back is 7.95 - some
deal). Ensoniq says that registered buyers of the EPS get the
two-volume programmers manual (reputed to be about 200 pages more).
I dunno, I haven't seen it.
Spent about 3/4 hour more with the board. Nice sound, lousy keyboard
(clacky and stiff), plays Mirage disks. There were only three EPS
disks at the store, some diabetic strings and the Fantasia sound
from a D-50 (can't remember the last one). The Mirage rock piano
sounded nice. The reason I don't hear the aliasing is because Ensoniq
stores all of it's sampled data in 16-bit format. I still don't
see how 13 bit resolution plays 16 bit samples back without aliasing
noise. The different sampling rates are useful - the 52.1K is very
clean (veeerrry clean). The Instruments are a neat concept. You
can assign them on the fly - there are even two Patch Select buttons
on the left near the mod wheel to quickly change characteristics
or patches. Sampling was very easy. Hook up a mike or line in, adjust
the level and sample the sound. Another five minutes max to truncate,
loop, etc. There are about 7 or 8 types of looping available. Very
intelligent.
The sequencer only holds one song! (but it holds 80K notes... huh?).
Sequencer has many ESQ-ish features. Once again, easy to use. The
manual is helpful but not totally necessary.
Price:2K. Extras: "2x" memory expander (brings you from 480K to
896K)...200 bucks. The 4x expander is not available 'til summer
because of the worldwide dearth of 1Mx16 chips. The 8-out expansion
port (yes, you have to *buy* the extra 8 outputs) is 250 bucks.
Oh, yeah, the 4x expander has an SCSI port too, for what it's worth.
So total price is about $2450. US.
Roland S-550:
Manual is all in "almost" English (Rolandese). 164 pages. Lots of
nifty pictures of pull-down menus and waveforms. Not a bad manual
at that. You really need a color monitor to use this thing. A composite
monitor sux. The visual editor is totally unintelligent except for
zero-crossing detection. Mouse takes some getting used to. You may
load S-50 disks, but it will NOT run the S-50 OS. In fact there
is a utility to blast the S-50 OS away and replace it with the S-550
OS.
No, it does NOT do sysex storage to disk of other devices' MIDI
data. It should considering the utilities, but no, it does not.
It does do formatting of blank disks, and it doesn't blow away your
sample in the process (like the Mirage). Where the EPS manual had
a very nice explanation of the memory utilization, this one was
buried in the MIDI implementation section.... Ugh.
32 "tones", 16 "voices", 8-ch polytimbral. Accepts Aftertouch, if
your keyboard sends it.
Comes with 1.5 meg. Two sample rates, highest is 31.5K. Much more
difficult to sample and massage the data. More flexible I guess,
though since you aren't bound to any particular loop. I'm not sure
about that though.
Price: $2700...expansion includes 80 meg disk and SCSI port w/memory
but it costs almost 3K itself.
Korg DSS-1:
Best sounding one. Easiest of them all to use. Instructions are
right on the front. Manual is 311 pages long. Looks like the best
manual. The DSS-1 also has an additive synth capability. Kind of
reminds me of a Hammond with 10 feet of drawbars on the left side.
Relatively easy to stack voices. 2 DDLs built in. 16 "multisounds",
32 "programs". 4 sampling frequencies. 48K is the highest. The memory
map was in a predictable place (yay!).
But it has limitations. Only 2-out. No sequencer. Bare-bones keyboard.
Little tiny window. Very cryptic.
Price: $1900 + 2x memory expansion = $2400.
Decisions, decisions....
Any comments, insights from owners, etc?
/pjh
p.s. I have the manuals for a couple of days.
|
1291.6 | Questions/Comments on samplers | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | MIDI DJ | Mon Apr 04 1988 11:01 | 27 |
| Questions and comments:
1) Does the Korg have a rack-mount version?
2) One should mention that Roland is distributing S-550 samples
for free. I know Ensoniq is not. What about Korg?
I'm inclined towards the S-550 at this point because I don't
want to get into doing my own samples just now. Thus the
shortcomings in the ease-of-use area aren't all that important
to me at the moment. With hundreds of free samples, I may never
need to do it myself.
However, I am VERY dissapointed that you can't do external MIDI
dumps to it. That seems like a really valuable feature (EPS
has it BTW as far as I know (Korg?)) which can easily be
implemented via software. Perhaps they will provide it as an
update at some point
3) Anyone know of any great deals on the S-550. April 15th isn't
too far away.
db
p.s. Anyone notice the cover artwork on EUW's latest flyer? They
KNOW how music-types spend their tax refunds.
|
1291.7 | | HPSMEG::LEITZ | b u t c h l e i t z | Mon Apr 04 1988 12:04 | 9 |
|
As an aside to potential 550 buyers...
Before banging down major domo bucks for the
550, you might wanna hang out and see what the
330 will look like. S'posed to be mid/late
April release...?
|
1291.8 | 13 bits and 96 db? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Apr 04 1988 12:28 | 6 |
| Uhm, I'm curious as to how they get 96 db out of 13 bits, when it
takes everybody else 16 bits. 13 bits seems more like 78 db using
the "6 db per bit" rule of thumb. Is their encoding scheme nonlinear?
len.
|
1291.9 | Oh, but they do "floating point conversion.." | FROST::HARRIMAN | I am not a technovangelist | Mon Apr 04 1988 13:02 | 34 |
|
re: .6
Korg DSS-1 rack mount = NO
Apparently it's a mature product and they're not into rack mounting
it. Bummer, since it's physically HUGE. I guess Roland is the only
affordable rackmount, ergo.
Disk samples:
Korg = NO, but, you can always trade from someone else.
Roland = YES, unequivicably.
Ensoniq = NO, but, there's a lot of Mirage disk base out there and
there is quite a public domain library of samples now. I hate the
fact that Ensoniq puts it to ya by selling samples for 19.95.
RE: .7
330 was covered in another recent topic. Basically a -550 without
the SCSI port, a little less memory, yet another OS, and half the
footprint. $2200.
RE:.8
I am really puzzled by the whole thing. Theoretically you should
be limited by the bits. Oh, in the spec it has a little unexplained
blurb: "Floating point output conversion for 96db dynamic range"...
I have no idea what they really mean by that. They also say the
following on the same page: "Data storage format: 16 bits", "Sample
converter: 13 bits", "24-bit internal processing", and "linear phase
output response for crystal clear high-end". I think I need a shovel.
/pjh
|
1291.10 | Are you sure? | AKOV68::EATOND | | Mon Apr 04 1988 13:12 | 8 |
| RE < Note 1291.9 by FROST::HARRIMAN "I am not a technovangelist" >
> Korg DSS-1 rack mount = NO
Isn't the DSM-1 a rack-mount DSS-1?
Dan
|
1291.11 | Re: .5,.6 | HPSCAD::GATULIS | | Mon Apr 04 1988 13:52 | 30 |
|
> Korg DSS-1 rack mount = NO
KORG DSM-1 is a rack mount. It is much, much different than a DSS-1
but can read and play DSS-disks (they won't sound the same though,
there are no DDLs in the DSM). The DSM does have separate outputs
for each voice, is multitimberal and has all kinds of neat layering
and mixing features.
I thought I saw mentioned in an earlier note that that there were no
factory samples for the DSS-1. Not so - they just added 10 disks to
the DSS-1 sound library bringing the total up to 70. Lots are junk but
lots are very good.
The DSS-1 is not multitimberal. But it does have the 2 built in DDLs.
It has 8 voices but only one set of stereo outputs. It can now be picked
up for a little over $1k.
DSS easy to use? Ho..Ho..Ho! It's easy if you want to stick with
the KORG library wait till you to try to turn some of those samples
into useable multisounds or better yet, try to disect some of the
factory multisounds (you need to do this if you want to do splits,
layers, or mixes. I don't want to give the wrong impression here,
it's layed out very nice and easy to understand, as a synth it's
trivial to uses but when you work at all with samples or try to
do simple disk maintence operations it takes lots of time and lots
of steps. But for all I know, the other units may be just as bad.
Frank
|
1291.12 | | SALSA::MOELLER | conducting the Silicon Symphony | Mon Apr 04 1988 13:58 | 9 |
| >but when you work at all with samples or try to
>do simple disk maintence operations it takes lots of time and lots
>of steps. But for all I know, the other units may be just as bad.
Making new multitimbral performance disks and/or dissecting factory
samples on the Emax is verrrrry simple. One button per menu, all
menu selections printed right on the case.
karl
|
1291.13 | Hypothesis . . . | IOENG::JWILLIAMS | | Mon Apr 04 1988 13:59 | 9 |
| RE .9:
It is possible that the input converter is only 13 bits, while the
operations you are able to perform on it is 16 bits. I don't know
this as a fact, but it makes some kind of rudimentary sense to me.
Fer instance, a digital filter would get rid of the sample noise.
Maybe???
John.
|
1291.14 | I _hate_ it when they do that. | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Hiding from the Turing Police | Mon Apr 04 1988 14:47 | 30 |
| It does make a perverse sort of sense. If you're running a
constant-speed output (52 KHz sample rate), you have to do
interpolation of sample values to "fit" the 52KHz output sample
rate.
Therefore, it makes sense to do the interpolation at some larger
number of bits, (like 24).
You also have to scale the sample by the output envelope, so you
end up shifting 13 bits into 16 or more places...
But you still only have 13 bits of output. Sillysillysilly, and
I don't understand how that makes more than 78 dB S/N. Let me be
more precise: 13 bits of output can ONLY make 78 dB dynamic range.
This does assume that the enveloping is done digitally, NOT in analog
after the D/A converter.
---------------------
Ensoniq, I held off from buying a Mirage because I didn't want to
deal with the (in)famous Q-chip that only lets you loop on a 512-sample
boundary.
Can't you make another machine like the ESQ-1, one that doesn't
have any "gotchas" hidden in it?
WHY DO YOU DO THIS TO US?!?!?!
grumblegrumblegrumblegrumblegrumblegrumblegrumblegrumble
|
1291.15 | Is a weird rule... | JAWS::COTE | Silicon Fusion, Silly Confusion | Mon Apr 04 1988 14:58 | 9 |
| >Ensoniq, I held off from buying a Mirage because I didn't want to
>deal with the (in)famous Q-chip that only lets you loop on a 512-sample
>boundary.
The number is 256 but the point is well taken nonetheless...
Edd
|
1291.16 | But You Can "Eat" At MacD's for $2 | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Apr 04 1988 17:20 | 17 |
| To elaborate on Bill's (and my earlier) point - with 13 bits, you
get 78 db of S/N for the simple reason that the quantization error
(the difference between the "correct" analog value and the 13 bit
digital approximation to it) limits the S/N to 78 db. No filtering,
digital or analog or anything, can remove this "noise" or, if you
prefer, distortion. It doesn't matter if you have a jillion bits
before or after it; if at any point you go through 13 bits, you
get 78 db S/N. If you use analog envelopes or filters *after*
the conversion, all you do is change the nature of the
noise/distortion. Sometimes this might be good, but sometimes it
might be worse.
Sorry, kiddies, there is no Santa Claus and there's no pot of gold
at the end of the rainbow. Nor is there a free lunch.
len.
|
1291.17 | Specsmanship | ROLLIN::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Mon Apr 04 1988 18:07 | 7 |
| The Music Tech review claims 78 dB something. I forget whether
the something is dynamic range or signal to noise.
If you have 16 bit in there somewhere (as they obviously do), then
I'm sure that you may make the claim that you have 96 dB dynamic
range, on some operations. I don't think Ensoniq said 96 dB
signal-to-noise.
|
1291.18 | right again | FROST::HARRIMAN | I am not a technovangelist | Mon Apr 04 1988 19:06 | 8 |
|
> I don't think Ensoniq said 96 dB signal-to-noise.
You are correct, they said 96 dB dynamic range. Still doesn't make
sense. They never even said (even in the clinic he eluded this)
ANYTHING about signal-to-noise.
/pjh
|
1291.19 | | SALSA::MOELLER | conducting the Silicon Symphony | Mon Apr 04 1988 20:09 | 9 |
| >They never even said (even in the clinic he eluded this)
>ANYTHING about signal-to-noise.
They must train their people to avoid that question.. back when
I was sampler-shopping I sat in on a Mirage session.. when I asked
about S/N ratio, he said "I don't know, I'm not an engineer."
.. jerk.
|
1291.20 | Gee mr wizard... | JON::ROSS | shiver me timbres.... | Tue Apr 05 1988 11:38 | 7 |
| no, not jerk! Clever fox!
Len, we are talking only linear DACs here? Can a non-linear
representation (floating point, exponetial companding,etc)
increase signal to noise as well as dynamic range?
Ron_playing_straight_man_role
|
1291.21 | Companders are optimized for a certain signal | MIDEVL::YERAZUNIS | Hiding from the Turing Police | Tue Apr 05 1988 12:26 | 9 |
| Yes, for CERTAIN signals, a companding DAC can do the job...
but ONLY for those certain signals.
Yecch, I hope they didn't do THAT. Companding DACs (especially
those without lots of documentation) can be incredibly hard to figure
out (so kiss your SoftSynth programs goodbye).
|
1291.22 | Tracking signal to noise. | IOENG::JWILLIAMS | | Tue Apr 05 1988 13:53 | 7 |
| Yeah, the companding DACs I've seen are not true logarithmic. They
have linear ranges with lograthmic skips. On the louder end, they
tend to have even more quantization noise. They have a lower noise
floor during silence, but the signal to noise tracks amplitude,
and is greater at high volume.
John.
|
1291.23 | nonlinear response. | MIDEVL::YERAZUNIS | Hiding from the Turing Police | Tue Apr 05 1988 14:14 | 9 |
| Er, I think you mean signal to noise gets WORSE at high volume.
That's the general idea- you put a lot of resolution down in the
area near +/- zero (where the gentle little stuff is) and have only
very coarse resolution for the peak signals (which don't last very
long, and people are used to hearing as clipped anyways).
It all depends on the typical signal you expect to run through the
system.
|
1291.24 | Still No Free Lunches | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Apr 05 1988 14:15 | 42 |
| I think John (.22) is right about the effect of nonlinear encoding
on S/N and dynamic range. You get more dynamic range, but at the
cost of increased quantization noise (just like floating point -
you can express a broader range of numbers, but the numbers you
can represent exactly get further apart as they get bigger - with
linear encoding, like integers or fixed point, the numbers that
can be exactly represented are always the same distance apart,
regardless of their magnitude). Now, floating point makes much
more sense than integer as an encoding for digital audio, because
the relative noise of a linearly encoded digital signal increases
as the signal magnitude decreases (e.g., the magnitude of the low
order bit is much larger relative to four bits than it is to eight
bits - 1/16 vs. 1/256). With floating point representation, the
relative noise remains constant as a function of magnitude, though
the absolute noise increases with magnitude.
Finally, for linear encoding S/N and dynamic range *are the same
thing*. If you go through 13 bits anywhere in the chain, and
everything is linear (e.g., you don't compress before and expand
after) then you get 78 db of S/N and 78 db of dynamic range.
Note that this S/N is the *best* possible, because it represents
noise due to quantization error, and doesn't include noise added
by other sources (e.g., thermal noise from analog components after
the DAC). Nor does it include noise due to processing (e.g., numerical
errors due to roundoff and the propagation of quantization error).
The dynamic range cannot (without compression and expansion) exceed
78 db for 13 bit linear encoding. Period, end of story.
Ensoniq is selling snake oil; if they use nonlinear encoding, then
you must pay for what you get in dynamic range with decreased S/N.
3 more bits worth of dynamic range (a factor of 8, or 18 db) probably
means 18 db more noise, relative to 13 bits, i.e., 10 bits worth
of S/N, which is just barely acceptable (about 60db). What good
is 96 db of dynamic range with 60 db of S/N? You can't hear the
quiet stuff over the noise! 60 db S/N is about what you get with
a Dolby'ed cassette.
len (who admits this analysis may be flawed, but somebody will have
to convince him).
|
1291.25 | Hardly for free... | FROST::HARRIMAN | Bill me later | Wed Apr 06 1988 10:08 | 29 |
|
re: .-*
well, academia aside, I went back yesterday afternoon to give
back the manuals and listened some more. Sampled a "quiet" track,
yeah, there's noise. If you sample at the right level you don't
readily hear it. Like everything else, there seems to be an optimum
level.
So I plunked down some bucks and ordered one. Delivery = 6 working
days. I also got the 2x expander (don't need SCSI). With the money
I am 'saving' from this transaction I will buy an ST. There is an
after-market product called "alchemy" which according to the blurb
(and the Ensoniq rep) allows not only additive synthesis but stereo
sampling (no, I haven't got much more detail than that). I also
got one of those new Roland 16 channel line mixers. Review will
be pending delivery of the goods.
FWIW, the EPS sold for $1900 (95 dollar discount, big deal), the
2x expander was $250 (expensive considering it's just a bunch of
memory chips), and the mixer was $900. I know I could have gotten
a better deal on the mixer at P.U. Wurlitzer but I'd either have
to drive there, or deal with mail order, neither of which I have
the time to do.
So when I get the board we'll do some more detailed examination.
/pjh_who_finally_made_some_kind_of_decision
|
1291.26 | Score one more for Ensoniq | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Yeah? | Mon Aug 08 1988 15:53 | 28 |
|
Minor update:
On Friday I received a Ty-Vek envelope from Ensoniq. Inside was
a blue 10-disk holder with 10 disks, a cover letter, a 10-page guide
to the disks, a 40 page "Outline to the Advanced Applications Manual"
containing answers to all the questions I've had since day 3, and
a feedback card.
The disks contain:
The 1.5 operating system
a Grand Piano
Strings, Brass
A Tenor Sax (I already got an alto)
Power Drums
Electric and Acoustic Bass
Electric, Acoustic and "Dream" Guitars
scads of soundtrack-ish timbres with hip breathy-type stuff.
Nifty. The cover letter states that I'll get the real "Advanced
Operations Manual" in October. I bought the unit in April...
Nonetheless, I'm impressed. Ensoniq was nice enough to give me the
disks as freebies...
/pjh
|
1291.27 | What is the going sales price? | MISING::SFAFRAK | Albuquerque...once a vast wasteland | Wed Aug 10 1988 01:30 | 6 |
| Hi,
I am considering purchasing an EPS with 1 meg of memory here in
Albuquerque for $1800.00 brand new. Is this a good price?
Scott
|
1291.28 | List price= $1995, no options | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Yeah? | Wed Aug 10 1988 09:41 | 9 |
|
Umm, 1 meg? That's not exactly a supported configuration. Specifically,
the EPS actually comes with 480K, providing that you have no memory
upgrades installed. If you have the 2x expander, you get "not quite"
1 meg. If you are paying $1800 for an EPS with a 2x expander and
it's not a used machine, then it's a good deal. It's not a bad deal
if it's just a stock EPS either, but if it is it's not 1 meg.
/pjh, who owns one.
|
1291.29 | Loadsamemory | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Wed Aug 10 1988 10:17 | 3 |
| BTW, FZ1 comes with 1 upgradeable to 2 meg onboard.
Richard.
|
1291.30 | At least I'm not plugging Ensoniq for a change | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Wed Aug 10 1988 11:10 | 73 |
| The FZ-1 is an incredible bargain for what it does.
I am very partial to the Roland samplers. I found their advantages to
be rather overwhelming.
o Open Architecture - SW is loaded on boot. This means you get
get new SW without requiring replacement of ROMs, etc.
Roland is also known for it's continuing support of
released products (S-50 updates, MC-500 updates and
options)
o Free library - buy an S-50 and you have access to 100+ disks
of professionally engineered samples. Just walk into your
Roland dealer with some blank floppies and copy 'em. Creating
good samples is a science, bordering on black art. Do not be
fooled into thinking that "I'll just do my own samples". It
can be very hard to create a really effective sample.
After-market stuff is much more important for samples than
for synths.
I can buy Nashua brand floppies for as little as 70 cents each,
which means I can have the ENTIRE current Roland sample library
for about the cost of *ONE* aftermarket patch EPROM for synths
like the ESQ-1, D-50, etc.
o Even though after-market samples are important, you'd be crazy
to get a sampler and not make some samples of your own. Roland
samplers have significant advantages in this area as well.
A builtin video interface. You wanna edit samples on the EPS
you gotta buy a PC, and the software to do it. What's more
is you can't hear the results of your editing without loading
the sample back to the EPS (or whatever) from the PC.
The Roland gives you the editing software (truncation, digital
filtering, automatic looping, wave smoothing (for looping),
wave drawing, etc. WITH the unit that runs using the samplers
builtin video ports (composite video or 9-pin). Because the
editing software is built INTO the sampler you can hear your
edits AS you're doing them.
I have found this to be pretty important and much more efficient.
o To my ears, the Roland samplers sound better. For one thing,
the S-330 and S-550 have real-time digital filters (a lot less
noisey than analog filters). They also have a process somewhat
like oversampling but using *predictive* techniques that
eliminate a lot of "digital noise/grunge."
I mention these not to "talk anyone out of" getting a non-Roland
sampler. I mention these because I think these are all subtle
advantages (and I should mention that not all of them are UNIQUE
to Roland) and the Roland literature and the guys selling Roland
stuff at places like Daddy's are not good at explaining the advantages.
What don't I like about the Roland samplers? OK, I'll tell you
(again):
The manual for the S-550 is the sorriest excuse for a manual
I have ever seen. It's so full of errors, so poorly written,
and some incomplete that it at times infuriates me.
And yet, I've still managed to figure the thing out so....
I mean, unlike any other sampler in the price range, the user
interface uses a mouse and a video screen so it's obviously it's almost
automatically a better interface than the rest.
Also, the S-50 doesn't have a pressure sensitive keyboard and the EPS
does. This *IS* signiifcant. However, the Roland's do interpret
channel pressure (if you want them to). So my advice is to plan on
getting a pressure sensitive keyboard (I recommend the SQ-80) and get
the sampler in a rack-mount.
|
1291.31 | | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Yeah? | Wed Aug 10 1988 18:10 | 37 |
| > A builtin video interface. You wanna edit samples on the EPS
> you gotta buy a PC, and the software to do it. What's more
> is you can't hear the results of your editing without loading
> the sample back to the EPS (or whatever) from the PC.
Huh? You wanna edit samples on the EPS, you hit <edit><wave> and
play in the menu. You can hear the results of the edits immediately,
usually without even re-depressing a key.
When your "sample" consists of between 12 and 38 separate wavesamples
layered in 1 to 3 or 4 layers, a single wavesample doesn't apply.
This is one of the great things about the EPS in the first place.
Sure, you can eat memory with a large sample (which you got via
the sample dump standard from someone else's box) but you'd be VERY
surprised at how small some of the more expressive samples are.
I'm not convinced that seeing your waveforms is any more useful
than hearing them. Once upon a time I was synthesizing with a scope
hooked up to the output of the synth. I found it to be next to useless,
unless you were just having fun making Lissajous patterns or something
like that. The EPS has about 16 separate data massage functions
which I find much easier than the Roland's (IMHO) and you save almost
a kilobuck on video/memory/mouse/etc.
I do agree, the Roland sounds cleaner, usually. I've heard some
pretty ratty samples too. The EPS reads Mirage disks, there are
well over 1200 commercially available Mirage sample disks, not counting
the EPS library which is growing as well. I now have over 50 disks
of samples, and I only paid for one ($20) and that was worth it.
I'm not trying to rebut your comments, just trying to set the record
straight.
/pjh
|
1291.32 | One question | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Wed Aug 10 1988 18:50 | 9 |
| Well, I mean... you have a point that you can "edit" samples on
the EPS and hear it right away.
But let me ask you one question:
Why is there (so much) PC software to edit samples for EVERY
major non-Roland sampler, and NONE to edit Roland samples?
db
|
1291.33 | Because there aren't that many samplers! | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | I don't know about apathy or ignorance, and I don't care! | Wed Aug 10 1988 18:56 | 9 |
| Because the Mirage is such a pig to edit on... Even Ensoniq says
it's a pig (i.e. Not Recommended for major sample editing).
...and until the EPS, what else was there but the Mirage and the
Megabuck Machines (like Emulator II and Synclavier and Fairlight...)?
Remembering that both the Sync and the CMI have built-in video tubes
with light pens or tablets to do editing with...
-Bill
|
1291.34 | EPS or SQ80 -- hummmmmmmmmmm | MISING::SFAFRAK | Albuquerque...once a vast wasteland | Thu Aug 11 1988 05:19 | 18 |
| Thanks Paul for the memory explanation. I guess they (the music
store) were rounding up.
db, I definitely agree with your points regarding Roland samplers,
in fact I own an S-550. Why, then would I want to by an EPS? Well,
I really want to get a board with poly aftertouch, I like the
performance buttons and the fact that you can load samples at the
same time as playing, not to mention the fact that it can accept
dumps from other synths onto its floppy (I wish my S-550 could),
and there are others which unfortunately brain cramps have set in and
I cannot remember them. I do like the SQ-80 but I already have
an ESQ-1 (which in Albuquerque I could never sell) and I am not
too keen on getting another 8-voice "synth". However, if someone
were willing to take the ESQ-1 off my hands, well then...
Scott_who_wishes_one_keyboard_had_all_the_neat-o_features_AND_a_reasonable
-price
|
1291.35 | Who needs an external VDU? | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Thu Aug 11 1988 05:54 | 6 |
| BTW, the FZ1 has a great graphic display for editing/creating waveforms.
And the 'Essential Guide to Applications' 3rd-party manual tells
you how to make the most of it.
Richard.
|
1291.36 | It has that feature, it's on the vaporware disk ;-) | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Thu Aug 11 1988 10:19 | 42 |
| > I like the performance buttons
Those are definitely a good idea. However, one question I was never
able to get answered was "what MIDI data do they send"?
I talked to the Roland guy about that and he said that they definitely
are "following Ensoniq's lead" (remember this is a Roland guy saying
this!) in the area of Polyphonic aftertouch and performance buttons.
While he "couldn't" (either in the sense of not being "allowed" or
not being "able") give me any specific. It seems almost certain
that the next release of the sampling software will have stuff to
do that (probably by STANDARD MIDI modulators).
So at the moment it's vaporware. No question about that. But the
way I looked at it, even with points off for being vaporware, the
advantages of the Roland were overwhelming in terms of my personal
priorities.
>I do like the SQ-80, but I already have an ESQ-1
I had an ESQ-1 which I sold to get an SQ-80. I know of two other
people who are doing or have done the same.
> Not to mention the fact that it can accept MIDI Sysex dumps from
> non-Ensoniq machines
This was a big factor for me also. I told the Roland rep that I
thought this was a big factor in my getting an SQ-80 over a D-20,
and that I thought it should be added to D-20 follow-ons and that
it should definitely included in the utilities package disk for
the S-550.
Strangely enough he wasn't nearly so positive about this as with
the "poly-pressure + performance keys" stuff.
One thing he failed to point out that I realized later is that
if the SYS-553 sequencer program for the S-550 is truly "like an
MC-500", then you can use THAT program to store Sysex datadumps
usings the S-550's disk drive.
db
|
1291.37 | | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Yeah? | Thu Aug 11 1988 13:30 | 29 |
|
re: .32 db
Is it because nobody understands Roland manuals enough to write
something to talk to Roland samplers? ;^)
Or maybe, more seriously, Roland hasn't cooperated with any
developers, since they are marketing their own software...?
re: .36
> > I like the performance buttons
>
> Those are definitely a good idea. However, one question I was never
> able to get answered was "what MIDI data do they send"?
Which performance buttons? The two PATCH buttons don't appear to
cause the EPS to send MIDI at all, since they are internal architechure
only. The eight 'Instrument' buttons output Program Change 1-8 (and
if you send PC1-8 to the EPS it selects them)... with caveats, of
course, such as 'no stacking', for instance.
I could check the implementation guide for better answers. I have
not gotten good answers from the music stores, Ensoniq reps and
my own experience have been more helpful than anything.
/pjh
|
1291.38 | New member of RRR | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Thu Aug 11 1988 14:58 | 29 |
| Actually, as with most Roland products, the MIDI interface of the S-550
is very well documented in an appendix in the manual. It's one of the
things Roland is pretty good about generally.
> Or maybe Roland hasn't cooperated with any developers, since they
> are marketing their own software?
They aren't really "marketing" their own software. You get it with the
unit. They would not lose any money by having 3rd party software to do
it. If anything, it would make the product slightly more attractive
(more options on how to use it).
Anyway, we're really ducking what was obviously a leading
question. It seems readily apparent that the reason why there are
so many sample editors for non-Roland stuff and none for Roland stuff is
because there's a NEED for them with non-Roland stuff, and it
COMES with the Roland samplers.
No question but that if you are not planning to do much sampling
yourself, the lack of a video interface on other units is a non-issue.
However, if you aren't gonna do much sampling yourself I would think
that the FREE Roland sample library would be a major factor as well.
I guess it's just pretty obvious that I'm very impressed with
the Roland samplers. I guess despite my efforts to resist, I have
become a member of the RRR (Raucous Roland Renegades).
db
|
1291.39 | Whatever floats yer boat | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Yeah? | Thu Aug 11 1988 15:40 | 6 |
|
well, more power to you. ;^)
|
1291.40 | What about them performance keys? | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Fri Aug 12 1988 10:17 | 7 |
| I'd still be interested to hear a definitive statement of what MIDI
data the EPS performance keys translate to.
I mean the real question is can they be sequenced using an external
sequencer?
db
|
1291.41 | like watching live football on tape | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Fri Aug 12 1988 10:57 | 5 |
| program *performance* keys into a sequencer?
humph...
Richard.
|
1291.42 | | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Yeah? | Fri Aug 12 1988 13:07 | 7 |
|
re: .-2, .-1
SYSEX parameters. I'll post 'em when I'm back from vacation.
Bye y'all, gone to the Cape for a week, back Thursday.
|
1291.43 | Been a couple o'months but... | TALK::HARRIMAN | Huge Harry? Whispering Wendy? | Thu Nov 10 1988 14:35 | 13 |
|
re: .-3,.-2,.-1
Hey I found out these are just controllers. Documented in the
new version of the MIDI implementation for the EPS as well....
Depending on the button pair (00/01/10/11) you get different
controller numbers. They get sent out the MIDI too. My sequencer
can pick 'em up.
I get amazed by these things sometimes... ;^)
/pjh
|
1291.44 | FYI on my EPS
| PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Menus 'n mice...Men Usin' Mice | Wed Jan 11 1989 10:47 | 22 |
|
Here is some more info on my latest equipment failure.
My EPS, serial # 475, seems to have developed a thermal instability.
Manifestation is pretty catastrophic - basically it up and crashes
after about an hour of being powered up, and unless you let it sit
and cool down it won't reboot (won't even read disks, tune the keyboard
or let you push keypad buttons)...
Appears to be the power supply. Ensoniq is *immediately* sending
a new power supply, and the dealer will replace it. Nobody has
said anything about paying for any of this (I *am* still under
warranty for this sort of thing)...
Interesting development, though. My EPS gets a pretty reasonable
amount of use but is hardly beaten on, as it has probably only logged
about 200 miles of travel (my Polysix probably did about 900 miles it's
first year, and is still ticking along 6 years and 3000 miles later).
Ah well. Winsome, Losesome.
/pjh
|
1291.45 | EPS woes | LEDDEV::HASTINGS | | Wed Jan 11 1989 11:18 | 12 |
| Paul,
Sorry to hear your EPS is not feeling well. I wanted to make
sure that I wouldn't be a victim of "infant mortality" and kept
mine powered up for long periods of time befor my firt gig to "burn
it in". This doesn't sound like your situation though.
Do you use a case to transport it? Hard or soft? Do you expose it
to temperature extremes? Cold car to warm studio or vice/versa?
concerned EPS owner
Mark
|
1291.46 | It's my baby... I don't abuse it
| PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Menus 'n mice...Men Usin' Mice | Wed Jan 11 1989 11:29 | 19 |
|
Honest, Ma, I didn't do anything!
Seriously, though, that unit gets almost obsessive care. It never
goes anywhere outside of it's (softshell) case, nobody carries it
but me, and it rarely goes anywhere anyway. It lives it's life shuffling
between rooms at the studio. It does (and has) run for long periods
of time. I don't know... It does get rather warm in the control room
(when you have about 3000 watts dissipating into 800 cubic feet
it can get a bit warm) but everything else in the room works fine,
in fact, most of the stuff has never had a failure...
As I said, I suspect marginal power supply regulation as the culprit.
At least you'll know what it is if it happens to you. Mine is a
rather early unit, it's quite possible I would be one of the earlier
failures because they hadn't gotten their production ramp stabilized
yet.
/pjh
|
1291.47 | | MILCAT::HASTINGS | | Wed Jan 11 1989 13:47 | 10 |
| I suppose if I wanted to be truly safe I would mount a small fan
on my stand to blow air across the power supply heat sinks. Mine
get (almost) too hot to touch.
Since I just bought mine around September I would *hope* that Ensoniq
had their mfg act together. (Now if they could only get their
documentation together!)
Mark
|
1291.48 | well....that's a band-aid
| PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Menus 'n mice...Men Usin' Mice | Wed Jan 11 1989 17:50 | 16 |
|
Ah, but Mark, the documentation *is* together now. ;^)
(hope I'm not hitting a hot button too hard, but I got mine)!
I thought about fans, but the problem is they are quite annoying,
especially during mixing (drooooooooonnnnnneeeeeeee in the background
really doesn't help) and besides, there's no excuse, it used to work
and it doesn't now, and it got worse along the way.
But it was a consideration. Mine, by the way, *was* too hot to
touch, which is not really normal, nor is it what I remembered last
time I reached back there.
I love equipment failures. Don't you? :^(
/pjh
|
1291.49 | | STROKR::DEHAHN | | Thu Jan 12 1989 09:02 | 7 |
|
Get a 3" 22 cfm multiblade fan, commonly known as a Whisper Fan.
They move enough air to keep your equipment cool*er* but are almost
silent. If you can't find one send me some mail.
Chris
|
1291.50 | | LEDDEV::HASTINGS | | Thu Jan 12 1989 10:13 | 9 |
| re: .48
Paul,
Please accept my apologies if I pushed one of your buttons.
I completely agree that you should NEVER have had such a problem.
As an engineer, I am offended to think that what was perhaps a defective
*design*, was allowed out the factory door.
May your repairs be fast and complete,
Mark
|
1291.51 | Oh, don't worry about it
| PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Menus 'n mice...Men Usin' Mice | Thu Jan 12 1989 10:36 | 13 |
|
Oh, gee, Mark. Don't worry about it. Equipment failures make me
crabby... I have lots of fans kicking around, I used to buy them at
Eli Heffron's in Cambridge MA for about 8 bucks apiece. The whisper
fans are fine, but like I said, if it doesn't have it's own fan
then I shouldn't have to cool it. At the Reggae Festival this summer,
the temperature on stage was around 95F, and the only problem was that
the Mono-Poly drifted considerably, everything else worked fine.
Well the new power supply should be in today. I'll let y'all
know when it's rectified (no pun intended).
/pjh
|
1291.52 | I've been midified! | STORMY::RILEY | I *am* the D.J. | Thu Jan 19 1989 20:49 | 27 |
|
I can't believe it. Only last month I bought my first Midi device
(Alesis HR16 and MIDIVerb II).
Today I got my EPS. The serial number is 17321-F with a manufacture
date of 12-Jan-1989. The OS is version 2.20
The Musicians Manual is Part # 9310002701
The Advanced Applications Guide is Part # 9310 0029 01-A
Are these the "new" manuals you're talking about?
I got the EPS with 2x Expander + SCSI for $1870
UNFORTUNATELY, they are out of the 2x until Monday, so I just have
the EPS at home. Doesn't seem to be a whole lot you can do without
the extra memory.
The dealer says that when the 4x + SCSI comes out, they will take
100% trade in on the 2x.
I'M SO EXCITED!!!!! But tell me, what do I do with my Casio SK5?
Sample it with the EPS? HA HA HA HA ;-}}}
"jackin' the house", Bob
|
1291.53 | Congrats! | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | So where's the snow already? | Fri Jan 20 1989 10:44 | 13 |
|
Congratulations on your new purchase. Hope you find it as fun as
the rest of us seem to.
Feel free to ask questions about it. I've had mine almost a year,
and a few others here have had theirs almost as long.
The sample library is growing. At some point (if I can find a
3.5" disk with Kermit on it for an ST) I'll download some samples
to the network.
/pjh
|
1291.54 | Congrats, join the club! | LEDDEV::HASTINGS | | Fri Jan 20 1989 12:09 | 23 |
| re: .52
Congrats on your new toy! I've had mine about 4 months. Owning it
has been like a good marriage. The longer I own it the more I love
it. They really thought about the performing musician when they
designed this synth.
I haven't looked at my manuals recently but you should eventually
get a total of three. There is the Advanced Application guide (?),
Musician's manual, and (I think) the Users Guide. The third manual
will be mailed to you when its available *if* you filled out your
warranty card.
re: .53
Paul,
It'll be real nice to be able to exchange programs over the
net. I only hope that you don't find Kermit before I finally decide
to get an MIDI interface for my PC. Otherwise it will drive me nuts
to see all those programs and not be able to get at them! ;-}
regards,
Mark
|
1291.55 | Whatsa good price and where? | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Fri Jan 20 1989 12:39 | 4 |
| Ok, I've just gotta ask - what's a *good* price on one of these, and
where did you get the quote?
-b
|
1291.56 | my EPS purchase price | LEDDEV::HASTINGS | | Fri Jan 20 1989 13:31 | 19 |
| re: .55
Brad,
There may not be a straight forward answer to your question.
Options etc... may confuse the true price.
I went in on a three EPS group purchase.
EPS with 2X memory (SCSI option avail as upgrade)
2 - audio cords 15'
2 - MIDI cords 15'
access to all the free program samples in the store
Price $1995 (including 5% Mass sales tax)
I think that was a good price.
regards,
Mark
|
1291.57 | But they got lotsa games | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | So where's the snow already? | Mon Jan 23 1989 08:22 | 13 |
|
re: Mark
well at the rate I'm going it's gonna be a while. The Vermont Atari
User's group has a grand total of 30 members, none of whom have
Kermit (don't ask me why). Unless I can get bootstrapped with
something else to get Kermit up (what a thought, bootstrap a
bootstrap to get the loader for the loader...argh) I'm never going
to get Bulkdump over to the ST.
ah well, happy monday.
/pjh
|
1291.58 | Hey no probs... | KERNEL::FLOWERS | Hero of the Green Screen... | Mon Jan 23 1989 09:10 | 11 |
|
Hello,
Give me you mail address and I'll send you a disk with,
Bulkdump, Uniterm (kermit) etc.
Ok??
Jason.
|
1291.59 | Boy I love notes | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Make mine a double density... | Mon Jan 23 1989 09:24 | 4 |
|
ask and ye shall receive....
why didn't I do this six months ago...
|
1291.60 | EPS built in reverb! | LEDDEV::HASTINGS | | Mon Jan 23 1989 12:14 | 10 |
| Yesterday I was poking aroung on the EPS and in EDIT ENV3 I discovered
a Reverb setting! This is the envelope that controls the amplifier
output. Hmmm... sounded like a reverb unit had been added to my
EPS for free. Now I know there are limitations, it has to be set
up on a per instrument basis etc... but it seems to me you could
make a case that the EPS has, for all practical purposes, built
in reverb. Has anyone else played with this?
Mark
|
1291.61 | Then again, I'm not an EPS owner, so I may be wrong | NRPUR::DEATON | | Mon Jan 23 1989 12:49 | 12 |
| RE < Note 1291.60 by LEDDEV::HASTINGS >
Just guessing, but I would doubt that this setting really meant reverb
in the way you are thinking. There is a 'trick' by which you can simulate
reverb by extending the amplifier envelope release rate longer than the filter
envelope release rate. This gives a dull kind of 'tail' to the sound that, if
done right, is a loose approximation of reverb. The TX81Z has a parameter in
its programming that is called REVERB, too, but it is really the same thing that
I just explained.
Dan
|
1291.62 | SQ-80 has it also | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Mon Jan 23 1989 13:19 | 10 |
| re: .60
This is also one of the less mentioned one-pluses of the Ensoniq SQ-80
(over the ESQ-1), although it can be done for anything controlled
via an envelope (it's a feature of the envelopes).
It's a poor substitute for reverb because it eats up voices. I.E.
your "reverb" vanishes abruptly when you push that 9th note.
db
|
1291.63 | pedal to NOTE-ON?/?/?? | HPSTEK::RENE | Are you with me Doctor? | Tue Jan 02 1990 14:19 | 16 |
| Santa brought me a Yahahahah DD-5 drum thingie for Christmas.
I love it!! Midi'd up to my EPS, this thing is a blast. I can finally
get REAL sounding drum parts in a reasonable amount of time. What would
really make this a KILLER is if I could get the sustain pedal to
somehow trigger a NOTE-ON. It appears that the pedal can be used as
a CONTROLLER and used to modulate just about anything. I played with it
for a while but couldn't get it to work. (Damn, Dave O, why can't you
still be here 8'( ) I don't want (can't) spend the bux to get a
trigger/trigger to MIDI converter.
Can any EPS junkies help me out? I've just got this feeling that
this CAN be done. Just haven't quite got it yet....
Thanks!!!!!!!
Frank
|
1291.64 | no | TALK::HARRIMAN | Meanwhile, back in the jungle, | Tue Jan 02 1990 15:17 | 7 |
|
re: .-1
I haven't been able to coerce the EPS to give a note-on from either
pedal or the CV input. Seems like a software limitation.
/pjh
|
1291.65 | Anybody got a scsi disk on one of these? | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | It's a dog eat dog food world | Thu Jun 07 1990 10:25 | 18 |
|
Any of you EPS or EPS-M owners put a SCSI disk onto your EPS or
EPS-M yet?
I just bought a PS Systems 4x expander and SCSI controller for my
EPS, and after some surgery, installed it (anybody want or need a 2
year old 2x expander?).
Trouble is, here I am with a SCSI controller and no disk. So I'm
shopping for one. Of course, I need one with it's own case and
power supply, and it has to have a DB25 connector instead of the
Molex ones everybody else uses. I'd build my own with enough info.
Did anyone else know that the format of the EPS disks is Mac? I just
found that out in the documentation for the SCSI controller.
/pjh
|
1291.66 | mac cable would probably work | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Thu Jun 07 1990 10:54 | 4 |
| Mac's go from db25 to the centronics type 50 pin so one of their cables would
probably work -- check the pinouts on a Mac SYSTEM SCSI cable
Chad
|
1291.67 | EPS & SCSI drives... | XERO::ARNOLD | Read my quips. | Thu Jun 07 1990 11:00 | 42 |
| > Any of you EPS or EPS-M owners put a SCSI disk onto your EPS or
> EPS-M yet?
I don't even own an EPS (yet) but I've been thinking about it and have
been talking to Eddie Fritz (who says "hi!" to all his COMMUSIC
acquaintances, by the way) at Brian Guitars about this topic. So,
here's what I think I know...
> Trouble is, here I am with a SCSI controller and no disk. So I'm
> shopping for one. Of course, I need one with it's own case and
> power supply, and it has to have a DB25 connector instead of the
> Molex ones everybody else uses. I'd build my own with enough info.
I think it uses a DB25 because it's expecting a MAC-ish drive. Macs
use DB25 as their SCSI system cables so I think any MAC SCSI "system"
cable should do. ("System" cable here measn DB25 on 1 end and 50 pin
on the other end.) Many external Mac drives come with one of these
cables so it's worth asking about.
> Did anyone else know that the format of the EPS disks is Mac? I just
> found that out in the documentation for the SCSI controller.
Since the EPS seems to use the MAC format, I would think a good place
to look for a hard disk for the EPS would be the usual Mac mag ads
(like in MACuser, MACworld, etc.) and poke around. Also, the MACINTOSH
notes conference has an on-going discussion of inexpensive hard disks.
On Usenet, I seem to recall some discussions that there may be a
restriction on what kinds of disks the EPS can either initialize or
read. I would imagine that a call to Ensoniq or your Ensoniq dealer
would be wise before you buy the disk to make sure the disk you buy
will work.
For what it's worth, I'm thinking of getting a 45meg removable hard
disk. Thus, I could have a few 45 meg disks for the EPS and use some
other 45 meg disks to back up my Mac's internal disk (easier than
floppies).
As one final reference point, I have recently seen ads for internal or
external 80 meg Quantum disks for ~$599 (+ shipping) in some ads in
MacUser.
- John -
|
1291.68 | Ensoniq-Blessed Drives | AQUA::ROST | I'll do anything for money | Thu Jun 07 1990 11:14 | 7 |
|
The Transoniq Hacker publishes a list every month of drives that
*Ensoniq* has verified will work with the EPS. I'l try to remember to
post the latest list. Use of nonverified drives has caused lots of
problems for users based on mail in the Hacker and over USENET.
Brian
|
1291.69 | Thanks | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | It's a dog eat dog food world | Thu Jun 07 1990 12:08 | 9 |
|
I'd appreciate any info I can get. I'm an Atari and Clone user, not
a Mac hack. The PS systems SCSI controller is a WD1003, so I'd suspect
the EPS operating system first. Maybe it's time to subscribe to
Transoniq hacker. It's probably unavoidable that I'll end up having
to get into Mac stuff too. Ugh, too much conflict of standards.
/pjh
|
1291.70 | ... | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Thu Jun 07 1990 12:25 | 10 |
| The glory of standards and their implementation
"blessed" drives
Chad
|
1291.71 | Drive size | TROA01::HITCHMOUGH | | Thu Jun 07 1990 14:06 | 11 |
| May or may not be relevant, but....
When attaching a SCSI drive to a MAC laser printer (NTX), the drive
MUST be able to return its size (standard SCSI command) for it to
be recognised. Not all drives do this and consequently wont be seen
by the SCSI controller on the printer.
This may be one of the things that contribute to a "blessed drive".
Ken
|
1291.72 | These Are The Drives Ensoniq Says Are OK | AQUA::ROST | I'll do anything for money | Fri Jun 08 1990 13:37 | 25 |
| From the May 1990 TH:
Tested and Approved Hard Drives For EPS:
Rodime 45 plus, 60plus, 100plus, 140plus
CMS 43SD, 20SD, 30SC, SDU30
Microtek Nova40
Eltekon OVD-20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 80, 90, 120
(this is what I saw the Ensoniq rep using at a clinic recently)
General Computer Hyperdrive FX/20
Mass Micro Mass 30e
SupraDrive MacPlus 20
Current OS for the EPS and EPS-M is 2.4, FWIW.
Brian
|
1291.73 | Thanks, now where can I get one? | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | It's a dog eat dog food world | Mon Jun 11 1990 10:26 | 18 |
|
Thanks,
After checking around here (Vermont), I find that my choices are
exceedingly limited. The only reputable Mac dealer sells either
Genuine Apple or some other brand that's not on the list and requires
a special driver for the Mac to work with it (which makes me doubt
the EPS will like it). I suppose I could go down there and buy a
Mac rag to find out who sells these, but if anyone has a handy
pointer to help me figure out a good price on one, I'd sincerely
appreciate it. Or some place in Massahampshire that might have one
I can get. My experience with dealers in Vermont is that they're
usually happy to order one for you, you wait three weeks, and they
charge you at least list price for it when it comes in. Such a
privilege.
/pjh
|
1291.74 | oh yeah, one other thing | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | It's a dog eat dog food world | Mon Jun 11 1990 10:33 | 9 |
|
I also heard that there is another version of the EPS OS on it's way.
No release notes yet, but it's supposed to provide significant
enhancements, and I heard that it's also gonna be the last upgrade
we get from Ensoniq for the EPS. Probably just another rumor, but has
anybody else heard this?
/pjh
|
1291.75 | � Yes I've also heard about a new OS � | ESKIMO::FOSSETT | | Sun Sep 02 1990 06:47 | 20 |
| Hi
I too am a proud owner of an EPS also. re: to 1291.74 about
the operating system being upgraded is true. I have recently purchased
a sample editing program called EPS-Sense for IBM computers and
clones. Everything works fine in the program except the most important
feature that I bought the software for doesn't work. Yup you guessed
it; it's the waveform editing feature. Well anyway I was talking
to one of the authors who wrote the program and he said that he
just recently finished talking to the person who was doing the code
for the new OS for the EPS. This new OS will fix the problem of
wave sample dumps that EPS-Sense depends on to view wave sample
info. I am sitting on the edge of my seat waiting for this new
OS to come out so that I can utilize this program to edit wave samples.
I am still new to sampling so a visual editing aid will help me along
until I become more familar with looping. I bought my EPS at the
last clinc at Union Music. I believe that I was the only person
that night to buy anything that night.
Calvin F.
|
1291.76 | EPS Hard Drive solutions | WEFXEM::COTE | There wasn't even any Hollywood! | Tue Feb 19 1991 18:46 | 26 |
| <<< DNEAST::SYS$TOOLS:[NOTES$LIBRARY]COMMUSIC.NOTE;2 >>>
-< * * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * * >-
================================================================================
Note 2578.0 EPS Hard Drive solutions No replies
CACHE::FONTAINE 20 lines 19-FEB-1991 14:59
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I tried to find a note somewhere containing this information but was
unable to, soooo i'll start a new one. I'm getting ready to dust off
my gear after about a year vacation and want to get a hard drive
happening for my EPS. I know that there are plenty of solutions
available out there but none of them are cheap. I have a couple of
ST-506 drives laying around from my PC-Clone adventures and I know
that Adaptec makes a SCSI to ST-506 adaptor board (4000A?) so the
question is, will this work? If so, what else is required (I have the
2x memory expander) such as cableling and does anyone know of a good
source for the "pieces" I need. Seems to me that if you have the drive
laying around, that you should be able to get up and running for under
$200. I've heard that the SCSI connector on the EPS is non-standard.
What kind of connector might I find on the Adaptec SCSI to ST506 board?
Someone out there must have done this already. Any discussion on this
would be extremely helpful. I think the Adaptec board can be had for
around $100. About $30 for a small switching supply. And for those that
don't have an ST506 drive laying around, used ones can be had at these
computer shows for under $200. Any Ideas!
-Andre
|
1291.77 | define "non standard"... | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Do not annoy the monkeys. | Thu Feb 21 1991 13:58 | 27 |
| >> and I know
>> that Adaptec makes a SCSI to ST-506 adaptor board (4000A?) so the
>> question is, will this work? If so, what else is required (I have the
>> 2x memory expander) such as cableling and does anyone know of a good
>> source for the "pieces" I need.
not sure, but it might. The cabling is actually rather straightforward,
and most of the pieces can be gotten from either Radio Shack or
an Apple dealer.
>> I've heard that the SCSI connector on the EPS is non-standard.
it's not 50 pin scsi, if that's what you mean. It's a 25 pin D connector
that incidentally follows the MacIntosh 25 pin SCSI format.
>> What kind of connector might I find on the Adaptec SCSI to ST506 board?
>> Someone out there must have done this already. Any discussion on this
>> would be extremely helpful.
Have you tried the IBMPC, MACINTOSH and ATARIST conferences?
NAC::IBMPC, MOSAIC::MACINTOSH, MAY14::ATARIST?
I seem to remember a discussion about this, though not related to
hooking up an EPS.
/pjh
|
1291.78 | | LANDO::ALLISON | | Thu Feb 21 1991 14:14 | 11 |
| The Adaptec 4000A has a standard 50 pin flat SCSI input cable and
34/20 pin cables out to the RD drive. I believe it does have the
capability to run 2 drives, but have no idea how the EPS might deal
with that.
If you're interested, I have a new Adaptec 4000A with manual that I
recently bought to interface an RD53 to my Atari-ST, but decided not
to use... I paid $100 for it, but would take $75 for it...
Brian
|
1291.79 | Where wires and wiring are *_REALLY_* understood. | ULTRA::BURGESS | Mad man across the water | Thu Feb 21 1991 15:52 | 20 |
| re <<< Note 1291.77 by PAULJ::HARRIMAN "Do not annoy the monkeys." >>>
> -< define "non standard"... >-
> Have you tried the IBMPC, MACINTOSH and ATARIST conferences?
> NAC::IBMPC, MOSAIC::MACINTOSH, MAY14::ATARIST?
....I would be remiss if I didn't put in the usual plug for
the Amiga conference too (-:, (-:
BOMBE::AMIGA
I made an entry about a week ago on this subject, it lists the
name, address, phone number, part numbers and prices of an outfit that
specializes in "parts", boxes, cables, etc. 50-25 pin cables are in
there too. The topic is 4491, it started out as a request for the
25-50 pin wiring diagram .....my reply is .13
Reg
|
1291.80 | More fun with the EPS | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Tour de Font | Tue May 28 1991 12:27 | 47 |
|
I spent my Memorial Day in the studio playing with SampleMaker
and the EPS. SampleMaker is a 60-op FM waveform generator that
can also upload samples via SDS, runs on the Atari.
Anyway, I generated some waveforms, downloaded them to the EPS,
mucked around with the loop points, and got some tiny samples.
I mean, tiny. 4-7 blocks. Using SampleMaker I was able to make
a pretty reasonable DX7ish "tiney" piano wavesample, 4 blocks
long. By creating another layer, and copying the wave parameters,
then detuning slightly, and panning to stereo, etc., I got
a nice flanged digipiano in 7 blocks. One of the nicest things
about the EPS that I haven't spent much time with is the
"synth side", i.e. filters and EGs. You get separate EGs and
2 filters for each layer. So by doing some traditional patch-work
on the waveforms, I got slightly separate decays between the
two layers, and some expression by using the second lowpass
filter for each modulated by the key velocity.
Of course, some interesting side effects. If the waveform is
too short, you can get confused trying to set the loop points,
because the loop click gets fast enough to become a frequency
component in itself, which confuses the pitch. The EPS is
not particularly gracious when you accidentally or otherwise
set the loop begin past the loop end (ouch. crash, sometimes).
And I found out all over again about frequency shift; the EPS
tries to assign a root key all by itself, if the waveform
frequency isn't the same as the root frequency, you have to
go find the right one (pitch page), then tune up or down
to get the pitch to match the keys. And you have to do that
for each waveform you load in, even the parameter copies. I
guess that's a feature ;^).
And the sample frequency becomes more important when you are
using small waveforms. The distortion inherent in a lower
sample frequency really shows up when the waveform is small,
and you push the playback frequency (play higher notes).
I hadn't seen many useful samples under 120 blocks. Now I have
a 4 block organ, a 7 block digipiano and a 10 block clavinet.
Kind of like having an SQ-80, a sampler and a DX-7 all at the
same time. At least it takes up a tad less real estate. I've had
my EPS for 3 years now, I still keep finding new things to do with it.
/pjh
|
1291.81 | EPS Mailing List on USENET | RGB::ROST | Let me in to do the Popcorn! | Thu Jun 13 1991 10:23 | 28 |
| From USENET, an EPS mailing list pointer:
From: [email protected] (Joe Niski)
Subject: EPS mailing list
Date: 12 Jun 91 19:21:16 GMT
Hi netters:
For some time now i've been responsible for a mailing list for people
interested in the Ensoniq EPS sampling keyboard. The list hasn't seen much
traffic lately, but with the articles i've seen recently regarding the EPS 16+,
i thought it was time post the address again.
The address for the mailing list is [email protected]. To be added to or removed
from the list, send mail to [email protected].
This was formerly a bitnet address, but we're dropping bitnet at the end of
June.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Joe Niski [email protected]
Mac Support Coordinator
Reed College, Portland, OR 97202 503-777-7525
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Joe Niski [email protected]
Mac Support Coordinator
Reed College, Portland, OR 97202 503-777-7525
|