Just came across a chord chart which I had completely forgotten I had. This was copied from the manual for the Yamaha PSR8000 owned for a short while and disposed of in favour of the Kn6000. The chart lists all the chord types which the Yamaha could read (35 repeat 35 in all) and also showed the notes to be played for each chord.
Now, I'm pretty sure that the manuals for the SMAC1200 and Kn3000 also displayed such a list but I can't re-call if the 6000 did. Certainly, the playable chords are not listed in the Kn7000 manual, so I decided to see how Technics managed against Yamaha.
No problem with the first few chords, a C chord played displayed C, C9 displayed C9, but then odd things happened, Just a few examples follow:-
C6(9) - notes played c d e g a - produced
A7sus4 display.
CM7(9) - notes c d e g b - produced Em7.
CM7#11 - notes c d e f# g b (try playing
that chord!) produced Em add9.
Cm7(9) - notes c d eflat g bflat - produced
Eflatmaj7.
Those are just a few examples. Anyway can't do anymore - getting cross eyed as it is.
Point behind all this - I always thought that the root note of any chord played determined the displayed chord, eg play C as the root and you get a C chord, play E flat and you get an E flat chord. Why doesn't Technics do this?
This doesn't affect my enjoyment of playing the 7000 - whatever ever chord played (reading from music) produces the desired musical effect, and I rarely if ever look at the chord display when playing, but it does mean that I still don't know how many chords the 7000 recognizes.
Ogre