Thank you all for your insightful information.
I have actually played the PA1xpro and I thought the sounds were good however the styles/fills didn't blow me away, for $3,500. When I heard the Tyros2 sounds/styles from the net, I was amazed at the realism of the sounds, especialy the ones using the articulation technology. Not much on the pianos though, which I primarily use. Any improvement from the original Typos?
Not to throw another wrinkle in this, but back in the summer, after searching high and low for a music store that had a Roland G70 to try out, I finally found one and drove 2 hours to play it. Again, I wasn't blow away with the sound quality - in addition, the Roland rep was new to the keyboard and was not able to trully demonstrate it to its full potential. They were trying to sell it for about $5,000.
Bottom line - I want a high quality keyboard that is easy to use and I don't have to spend countless hours tweaking to get just the right sound/style; for me, that's not why I would pay over $3,000 for a keyboard. If I'm paying this much, it better sing too.
I play with a church band - various types of songs/styles, and often depend on the arranger as the other band members don't always show up. I need something I can learn quickly as I can't afford any downtime. I'm hoping that going from my current Yamaha PSR-740 to the Tyros2 will not require a huge learning curve.
Can anyone please tell me if the Tyros2 has the power supply inside, or is it external, like some of the lower models (PSR-740)?
Thanks.