Yamaha also released a PSR 4500 or X4500 that had the same big speakers and roll bars, but had some extra features like a cartridge slot and two more drum pads. I remember reading about this in the January 1990 Keyboard Magazine feature on portable keyboards. It was sort of the big brother to the PSS-680, but the 680 had the FM synth feature where you could edit the sounds.
It's made by a company simply called "Nose". They only made control pedals, switches etc. I think they are gone now :( Está hecho por una compañía llamada simplemente "Nose". Solo hicieron pedales de control, interruptores, etc. Creo que ya no están.
Hi pretty sure you wont read all your comments but here goes.... I found one all working... I suppose i wanted to know if these are a sought after machine... Im a musician but feel i wont actually make the most out of it... Your videos are helping though... When i did my first little jingle my friend said prince od bel air... Magic eh
Hey Eric, yep I do try to answer all the comments I receive, I check ‘em every morning when I wake up :) I think the appeal of the 3500 has died off a little in the past year or two due to its size and also due to everyone buying their “dream” synths during covid. Experience tells me that it’s value will eventually bounce back though, so I suggest you hang in to it for a while if you’ve got the space :)
Hello there, I saw you are still responding :) I found a 4500 without rubbers for 50 bucks, after that I found 3500 for 10 more, I think I will go for 3500, Ik 4500 is rare but I want to play just in few days, and rubbers are so fkn expensive, but maybe there is a solution? Are they have same rubbers, I will think about buy both if so to switch them, or maybe there are some other alternatives, can I somehow do it for myself? If u have a shop in there with them let me know (with resonable price of shipping haha) Thank you for doing great job and have a nice day!
I would definitely buy both at that price, then you can try them both out, decide what to do, and you certainly won't lose money when you sell what you don't want :)
Oh it's easy man - Just get a midi cable and plug from MIDI OUT on the controller to MIDI IN on the receiver. Usually it'll work first go like it did in this video. The more advanced the receiving instrument, the more tricky it can get, but the PSR3500 is very simple with MIDI like most early Yamaha keyboards :) Gearfacts
Yamaha also released a PSR 4500 or X4500 that had the same big speakers and roll bars, but had some extra features like a cartridge slot and two more drum pads. I remember reading about this in the January 1990 Keyboard Magazine feature on portable keyboards. It was sort of the big brother to the PSS-680, but the 680 had the FM synth feature where you could edit the sounds.
Yes there was one sold on ebay recently ($46!!) and I missed it. Note to everyone: If you're selling a synth, please offer postage! It's easy!!! :) GF
I also proudly owned a PSS-680. I gladly own a 4500.
Do the demo song
There's a few times in life when one just stops to ask "who was the genious behind this" with a lot of sarcasm.
This is one of those times.
Awww c'mon David, you have to admit this is a pretty fun board! Although if you are referring to the rollbars... I agree 100% haha GF
The PSR-4500 the model up from this has digital symth allowing extra stunning EFX.
I wish i had that one :) GF
So, the interface between the Triton and the PSR gets you a split bass that you couldn’t get with the PSR on its own?
I think you could get that sound structure on the PSR3500 alone. It's just a set of signals from the Triton that seemed to work well :) GF
Cuál es el pedal que usas para el teclado?? Hraciasb
It's made by a company simply called "Nose". They only made control pedals, switches etc. I think they are gone now :(
Está hecho por una compañía llamada simplemente "Nose". Solo hicieron pedales de control, interruptores, etc. Creo que ya no están.
Hi pretty sure you wont read all your comments but here goes.... I found one all working...
I suppose i wanted to know if these are a sought after machine...
Im a musician but feel i wont actually make the most out of it...
Your videos are helping though...
When i did my first little jingle my friend said prince od bel air... Magic eh
Hey Eric, yep I do try to answer all the comments I receive, I check ‘em every morning when I wake up :) I think the appeal of the 3500 has died off a little in the past year or two due to its size and also due to everyone buying their “dream” synths during covid. Experience tells me that it’s value will eventually bounce back though, so I suggest you hang in to it for a while if you’ve got the space :)
Hello there, I saw you are still responding :) I found a 4500 without rubbers for 50 bucks, after that I found 3500 for 10 more, I think I will go for 3500, Ik 4500 is rare but I want to play just in few days, and rubbers are so fkn expensive, but maybe there is a solution? Are they have same rubbers, I will think about buy both if so to switch them, or maybe there are some other alternatives, can I somehow do it for myself? If u have a shop in there with them let me know (with resonable price of shipping haha) Thank you for doing great job and have a nice day!
I would definitely buy both at that price, then you can try them both out, decide what to do, and you certainly won't lose money when you sell what you don't want :)
@@gearfactsOh okay, thanks! But to make sure, in both rubbers are the same?
Show us how connect midi keyboard to other midi keyboard
Oh it's easy man - Just get a midi cable and plug from MIDI OUT on the controller to MIDI IN on the receiver. Usually it'll work first go like it did in this video. The more advanced the receiving instrument, the more tricky it can get, but the PSR3500 is very simple with MIDI like most early Yamaha keyboards :) Gearfacts
This is one I have never seen !
It was THE beast of its day
This thing doesn't sound any different than the PSR 190 and it's no uglier either
The PSR-190 is all PCM though
@@BuickGeek24 the piano sample is exactly the same on both models
B0Geek has a point though, the FM synthesis is a big extra. I hear what you're saying about the general similarity though :) GF