
Years ago, Keyboards also made Saturn, a classic on our platform.
Good! I mean, bad... I mean it's good you noticed that, John. Bad is they did it unfair. Somebody German speaking should point them at their forum or at the headquaters.On 2004-05-06 04:15, johnbowen wrote:
Anyway, just was a little surprised to hear these examples with the
obvious 'mistakes' in the two settings, and wanted to express my
opinion.
I actually did a comparison of original and your Pro One a while back via another internet forum. A guy who had a real one would post a sound and a pic of how the knobs were placed and I would try to copy it. If I copied the exact positions, I would get a different sound, but with slight tweaking of the envelopes I could get really close. So yeah, it's not quite fair to just copy settings "as is". You have to tweak it to try and get the sound as close as possible.On 2004-05-06 04:15, johnbowen wrote:
I believe it says the first recording is the emulation, followed by the hardware version.
I just took a listen to the Pro One comparisons, and I was surprised that they made several examples where the settings are different between the two:
example 4 - the filter envelope's sustain level is different (higher) in the hardware recording.
example 5 - the emulation's pulse settings are not set to as 'square wavish' as the hardware settings.
example 6 - the emulation's oscs are tuned to the same octave; the hardware has the oscs an octave apart.
To my ears, these affect the results in a significant enough way (more
so for #5 & 6).
with #4, was the tester trying to set things by visually comparing the
knobs? This could explain the sustain difference, but I would think it's
not a valid way to compare things.
Anyway, just was a little surprised to hear these examples with the
obvious 'mistakes' in the two settings, and wanted to express my
opinion.
96kbps, mono. that's not too bad :>On 2004-05-06 15:06, Joxer the Mighty wrote:
(..) these comparisons (...) seem rather pointless since the mp3's are encoded at 96 kbps.