Hi, recently bought such pedal for my wife, she owns Roland fp30x keyboard, pedal works well in continuous set, but not for all tones, for example it works for concert piano as continuous, but not for church organ or pipe organ, for them it works like switch. Is that expected behavior?
Hello! I need an expression pedal like Roland EV5. But I like Roland DP10 more because it has piano like action. So the question is can Roland DP10 be ingaged not into "sustain" but into "expression" (or "volume") keyboard input and used as common expression pedal? And are there any differences between Roland EV5 and Roland DP10 in "continuous" mode?
Technically yes, but mechanically NO because it goes back to 0 position, it does not latch. you can use it more like a roland joystick for modulation (in theory) though I have never tried doing that. A sub would be appreciated!
I have a piano Roland fp30x and with the factory pedal the dp2, it works perfectly when using piano sounds. But when I want to play piano + String using the dual function, the String notes are very long and they mixed together and the performance doesn't sound good. How can I correct this?
@@compc2 you should try looking at the manual or tutorials about that. there's an app editor. but if sustain function can't be edited then there's no solution.
Hi, have one question. Recently bought such pedal for my wife, she owns Roland fp30x keyboard, pedal works well in continuous set, but not for all tones, for example it works for concert piano as continuous, but not for church organ or pipe organ, for them it works like switch. Is that expected behavior?
@@japzproductions thanks for response, yes there is switch half damper/switch control. And for organs, half damper work as just switch. Yes, probably you are right, also thought that organs may not have sustain pedals.
@@tarasoliyarnyk4195 I mean for some pianos, especially older ones, it will work as a regular sustain pedal for all the sounds. it will work with every keyboard because it has a polarity switch.
Thank you so much!
Hi, recently bought such pedal for my wife, she owns Roland fp30x keyboard, pedal works well in continuous set, but not for all tones, for example it works for concert piano as continuous, but not for church organ or pipe organ, for them it works like switch. Is that expected behavior?
Hello! I need an expression pedal like Roland EV5. But I like Roland DP10 more because it has piano like action. So the question is can Roland DP10 be ingaged not into "sustain" but into "expression" (or "volume") keyboard input and used as common expression pedal? And are there any differences between Roland EV5 and Roland DP10 in "continuous" mode?
Technically yes, but mechanically NO because it goes back to 0 position, it does not latch. you can use it more like a roland joystick for modulation (in theory) though I have never tried doing that. A sub would be appreciated!
@@japzproductions Thanks, yes I assumed that it doesn't latch as normal physical piano pedals don't.
Thanks man. Non continuous pedals suck. I with i knew about these before i got a non continuous one.
I have a piano Roland fp30x and with the factory pedal the dp2, it works perfectly when using piano sounds. But when I want to play piano + String using the dual function, the String notes are very long and they mixed together and the performance doesn't sound good. How can I correct this?
well this is not on the pedal function. you have to edit it on the keyboard settings.
There is no way to edit de dual voice, only the main piano voices. Have you ever tried the pf30x?
@@compc2 you should try looking at the manual or tutorials about that. there's an app editor. but if sustain function can't be edited then there's no solution.
Can you quickly explain the difference between the contious/switch modes?
Thank you in advance :)
If you check the video around 2:00, you'll see continuous mode records increments like an expression pedal. switch mode is just on/off, O/127
Hi, have one question. Recently bought such pedal for my wife, she owns Roland fp30x keyboard, pedal works well in continuous set, but not for all tones, for example it works for concert piano as continuous, but not for church organ or pipe organ, for them it works like switch. Is that expected behavior?
what kind? you mean a rotary switch? if so, yes, because real organs don't have sustain pedals. probably why they programmed it that way.
@@japzproductions thanks for response, yes there is switch half damper/switch control. And for organs, half damper work as just switch. Yes, probably you are right, also thought that organs may not have sustain pedals.
@@tarasoliyarnyk4195 you're welcome. please subscribe! but not for every keyboard it becomes a switch on organ tones.
@@japzproductions you mean that, for some pianos, this pedal won't work at all, or that polarity would be different?
@@tarasoliyarnyk4195 I mean for some pianos, especially older ones, it will work as a regular sustain pedal for all the sounds. it will work with every keyboard because it has a polarity switch.
What's a switching sustain pedal vs continuous sustain pedal?
I am actually exploring Yamaha 2 models but don't know the differenxe
@@DeepakRaj-zh4qw switch means on-off only. Continous have half pedal
Do you know if this will work correctly with the Arturia Keystep 32?
yes, keystep has auto polarity switching. idk about the continous feature tho
@@japzproductions Thanks for answering. I'll get one and let you know. :)
@@dragonstone6594 cool. if it does, subscribe!
Will it work in arturia keylab 88 mk2?
It should, if the keylab has a polarity switch.
@@japzproductions thank you will check it out.
why no polarity switch?
it also acts as a polarity switch.
@@japzproductions awesome! So I can use it for example push it down to sustain let it go to de sustain lol if that even a word