I just solved this PSR2000 button 'status light' mystery that has really been baffling me.
This is on the subject of WHICH of the arranger function button's red lights light up after initial keyboard startup. This whole issue came up when I noticed that sometimes the ACMP red light came on upon startup and then others times it didn't. This may seem like a real trivial matter to some , but I guess I've always had an inquiring mind (no, I don't read THAT newspaper
) and love to figure out the what and why of everything.
Apparently you 'CAN' save the ACMP, Auto Fill -in, OTS link, and Sync Start button status and have the PSR2000 reflect this status at startup, but it seems to be setup a bit differently than on the PSR9000 or 9000pro. On the PSR2000, although the settings are set when you intiate a Registration Memory save command, making sure the 'style' box is checked, the settings themselves are not actually stored in the Registration Memory file (and can't be recalled there either) , but it's instead stored somewhere else (some kind of place like startup settings or something). Another discovery: the ACMP & Sync Start button status lights are linked to the 'OTS link' button. If you press the 'OTS link" button, both the ACMP & Sync Start button lights will come on. To have your keyboard start with the ACMP button light ON, you MUST press the 'OTS link' button which will light up the ACMP & Sync Start buttons as well. The 'auto fill' button status is saved independently. Once you got the buttons set to on/off as you like, then just hit memory (and make sure that the style parameter is checked) and select any memory button (1-8). You do not have to actually save the Registration Memory at all. For some reason just performing the last two steps puts these keyboard startup preferences into some kind of mysterious startup memory location in the keyboard. You can now turn off the keyboard and after turning it back on, you will have the button status appear as memorized. Mystery solved. I'm sure there will be plenty more PSR2000 mysteries (not covered in the manual) to conquer, but I'm just having a ball playing and performing on the PSR2000.