Support |
wow,ive been checking out the manual of this FC very powerful indeed,the only drawback is more tap dance not enough switches,why on earth didnt they do this with the FC-200? on the other hand,compact with a led screen and its price tag aint bad for what it can do thanx for the tip! Luis --- Mech <mech@m3ch.net> wrote: > At 6:55 PM +0200 10/29/07, Sjaak wrote: > >Thanks for all your replies. It appeared that the > FCB1010 was too > >big to fit under my synth stand; second: my > supplier told me that a > >lot of the FCB's have been returned within a year > due to hardware > >failures..... So I have decided to buy the Roland > FC-300 > > > >First impression: > >+ all pedals can be of type latch or momentary => > piano sustain can > >be programmed :) > >+ good positioning of all pedals > >+ good visibility of green and red LED's on stage > >+ easy to progam, no manual needed > >+ build like a tank => as the FC-200 > > I've got an FC-300 too, and this is a fine summary > of many of its > good points. Although you will probably need the > manual to look up > many of its more subtle functions. > > >- 1 global midi channel setting => it's not > possible to store > >different midi channel's with a pedal setting > > This is not correct at all. > > Ignore Standard and Control Modes (as well as Sysex > Mode, unless > you've got a VG-99). Those modes are worthless > unless you want to > dedicate the FC-300 to a single device, and I never > even bother with > them at all. The fourth Mode -- Patch Mode -- is > where you want to > be. In this Mode, the FC-300 will send MIDI > messages to any MIDI > channel, programmable per pedal. > > In fact, this is where the FC-300 gets over the > MAJOR complaint I > always had against the FCB-1010 (even though I've > got one an FCB > too): the expression pedals (not the switches) on > the FCB could only > ever be set to a single channel. So, for instance, > you couldn't > control Feedback on your Looper, then switch patches > and use that > same expression pedal to control, say, Filter Cutoff > on a synth > module. > > Not only can the FC-300 do that (I'm doing it with > several different > patches), but you can actually use a single pedal to > control SIX > different parameters simultaneously. These can each > be on different > MIDI channels if you like. You can not only scale > the control range > (parameter 1 may have a range of 0 - 127, while > parameter 2 only has > a range of 50 - 70), but you can also reverse the > ranges of > individual parameters (1 may have a range of 0 - > 127, while 2 has a > range of 127 - 0; accomplishing a nice little > crossfade between > sounds/effects, for instance). > > At Y2k7, for instance, I had programmed all the > volume swells for the > VG-99 into the right-most expression pedal (I could > have easily done > it by switching to SysEx Mode, but I wanted the > convenience of > staying in one Mode during the performance). The > left expression > pedal controlled a variety of different functions, > depending upon > patch: Feedback on my Looperlative channels; Volume > of specific > tracks; Feedback of the echo effect built into the > VG; Speed of the > Leslie effect on one Patch; Track Playback Speed on > the LP-1; etc., > etc., etc. > > I kept the CTL 1 & CTL 2 switches the same on every > patch (Rec/Dub, > and Stop Now;Erase) for purposes of consistency, but > I could have > programmed those for independent functions per > patch. Likewise, I > attached an FS-6 footswitch for CTL 3 & 4, and > dedicated those to > Previous Track and Next Track functions on the > Looperlative. The > individual patches cycled through a variety of > functions too numerous > to name here. > > You imagine it, and you can probably program it in > Patch Mode on the FC-300. > > >- only 1 control message per pedal > > Again, not correct. > > In Patch Mode, you can actually send multiple > messages to multiple > channels (up to 6 messages, IIRC) on pedal press. > In addition, you > can send an additional 6 messages on pedal release. > The pedal > release messages can be programmed (per pedal) to > fire off on either > physical release (good for Note Off messages, so you > can turn it into > a set of MIDI bass pedals, or whatever etc.). Or > they can be delayed > until the next pedal is pressed, so that the release > messages are > fired off just prior to the next pedal's messages > are sent. This > latter function might be good, for instance, for > setting up a series > of chords that sound until the next "chord" pedal is > pressed, at > which time all the appropriate Note Off's are sent > before the new > chord's Note On's arrive). > > Look, even though I was extremely skeptical at > first, this thing will > in fact practically mow the lawn. It does > everything except for > "roll your own" SysEx (and it will do GM SysEx as > well as NRPN stuff; > you just can't program in an entire Hex String from > scratch). That's > something that I actually use pretty rarely these > days anyway. > > I'm using it to replace my Digitech PMC-10, which is > no longer being > manufactured of course. That's how good it is. And > at a price of > only about $300, it's less costly than many of the > other "full > featured" MIDI pedals out on the market today > (Ground Control Pro, > etc.). > > Sjaak, dig a bit more into the programming on the > FC-300. I'm > confident that with a bit of work, you'll find most, > if not all, of > your misgivings will quickly evaporate. > > --m. > -- > _____ > "the wind in my heart; the dust in my head...." > > www.myspace.com/luisangulocom ____________________________________________________________________________________ Be a better sports nut! Let your teams follow you with Yahoo Mobile. Try it now. http://mobile.yahoo.com/sports;_ylt=At9_qDKvtAbMuh1G1SQtBI7ntAcJ