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#214548 - 06/21/06 10:48 AM
Yamaha's definition of "portable"
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Member
Registered: 04/06/06
Posts: 83
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So I got my new YPG-625 and I'm really enjoying the sounds and features. The main reason I settled on this keyboard is great built-in speakers in a 40 lbs. package. It would have made no sense for me to buy a digital if it couldn't deliver good sound in a portable package.
Which brings me to Yamaha's "support beam." I don't think I'll ne using the stand much, but since it came with the package, I spent an hour assembling it. Come to find out, the one new item included with a YPG-625 that's NOT included with any other "Yamaha Portable Grand" is a support beam. In addition to adding about 3.5 lbs to the board, the support beam makes it impossible to play on a table or desk. There are screws hanging from the underside that would gouge into a table, plus which it makes the keyboard tilt upward at an awkward playing angle.
The only function I can see for the support beam is to support the greater weight of the YPG-625 to keep it from sagging in the middle after months of use. The support beam is therefore useless if the 625 is lying on a table, and in fact, there are little rubber pads -- apparantly for keeping the 625 in place on a table -- that serve no function when the support beam is attached.
Here's the thing. I can't imagine anyone carting that ungainly, uncollapsible, 15 lbs. stand to a gig, and I can't imagine anyone screwing and screwing the six phillips screws two or three times a week to use the stand at home. They are stretching the "portable" right about to a bust.
I see they have a $25 height adjustable table at WalMart. I think I'm going to buy two of them -- one for my apartment, and one to keep in a car for gigs where they don't have a suitable table. As far as I can tell from the manual, I'm not voiding the warranty by not attaching the support beam. The instructions for attaching the beam are in the section on building the stand. And while the manual warns not use to use any other stand with the keyboard, it doesn't say you can't use a table. And like I say, the rubber pads only serve a function if it's laying on a table.
So I say I still have a warranty if I don't use the support beam!! Any comments?
Rick
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#214553 - 06/23/06 01:03 AM
Re: Yamaha's definition of "portable"
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Member
Registered: 04/06/06
Posts: 83
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It's possible that in another 3 years they'll come up with a truly portable digital piano. I think the P70 fits the bill. It only has a few sounds, but it sounds very, very good, even though the speakers are half the size of the YPG. Weighs 28.7 lbs. If Yamaha and Roland could get together and put the P70 speaker system in the FP-2, then you'd have all the MIDI connections, audio IN/OUT 64 poly, 4 band digital equalizer. Headphone jack(stereo), USB, three pedal jacks, arund 33 lbs. But it might not work. Maybe all the 300 some sounds wouldn't sound great through the tiny speakers. Maybe Yamaha tailored the P70 speakers for just those 10 sounds. But if you just want a portable piano, I think the P70 qualifies. Rick
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#214554 - 06/23/06 07:41 AM
Re: Yamaha's definition of "portable"
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/08/00
Posts: 4715
Loc: West Virginia
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I'm not sure if you've looked at it yet, but have you considered the Casio PX310??? Don't be fooled by the Casio name either. This is a really nice digital. Graded hammer action, good piano samples, plus it has over 200 sounds, 8 digital effects, layer/split, registrations, midi in/out-through.
It's worth looking at, and it's under 30 lbs. I've been considering buying one of these to put in my living room. It's a nice looking board and doesn't take up much space.
Also the demos on Casio's site "SUCK" big time. I can't believe Casio would put such terrible demos up for this thing. They're poorly done.
Squeak
[This message has been edited by squeak_D (edited 06-23-2006).]
_________________________
GEAR: Yamaha MOXF-6, Casio MZX-500, Roland Juno-Di, M-Audio Venom, Roland RS-70, Yamaha PSR S700, M-Audio Axiom Pro-61 (Midi Controller). SOFTWARE: Mixcraft-7, PowerTracks Pro Audio 2013, Beat Thang Virtual, Dimension Le.
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#214556 - 06/23/06 10:56 PM
Re: Yamaha's definition of "portable"
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Member
Registered: 04/06/06
Posts: 83
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Hi squeak, Yes, I looked at the Privia PX-310. I agree it has excellent action and piano sounds. My only issue is with the small built-in speakers. I played it side by side with a DGX-555, the forerunner of my YPG-625, and it sounds very pale in comparison. Through headphones, the PX-310 sounds much better. (Still not quite as good as the DGX. ) The P70/YPG-625 are the first really portable digitals, with acceptable action and speakers, that an out of shape middle aged man can cart around with no help. The Roland FP-2 comes close, but again, the speakers. I seriously intend to gig in small halls with the 625. I like all in one solutions. The demos for the DGX line are pretty bland, too. Frankly, they put far, far more effort into the demos of pricier products. Jeffc, I think the pianos on the P70, YPG-625 and PX-310 are close enough that I'd need to play them side by side for more than 24 hours to make a decision. They are all very good. The Privia is "tri-element" sampled, but that's a more subtle distinction than you'd think. It does NOT mean there's no difference in tone between the YPG piano sound at p vs. f. One real difference: the PX-310 has soft and sustenuto pedal inputs; the P70 and YPGs have only a damper pedal jack. Rick
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