Kurzweil K2600 Musician's Manual page 143

Kurzweil k2600: user guide
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Velocity Offset. Note that Velocity Offset is the only parameter changed in this example; the
other parameters are set to their defaults (scale = 100%, curve = linear, min = 1, max = 127).
127
64
0
64
Strike Velocity
Offset and Scale work together. If scaling takes the velocity out of the ballpark Ñ for example,
you want to set it to 300% but that puts all of your notes at maximum velocity Ñ using a
negative offset, say around -60, can make it possible to still play at different volumes, although
your curve will still be a lot steeper than normal. If you use a negative scaling, then you must
use an offset: otherwise all of your velocities will end up as zeroes (well, ones actually, since a
MIDI note-on with velocity zero is something else). So to get true inverse scaling (that is, minus
100%), you must set an offset of 127 to get the full range of velocities. Setting the offset to 127
and the scale to -100% produces a slope like this (which is the same as the reverse linear curve):
127
64
0
64
Strike Velocity
Note that Offset and Scale affect only MIDI velocities; that is, these parameters donÕt change
Velocity Tracking in the programs themselves. Therefore, some programs (such as organ sounds,
which often have low VelTrk values) may respond only subtly to Offset and Scale, or not at all.
Velocity Offset: +64
low velocity keystrikes produce
medium MIDI velocity and greater
Velocity Offset: -64
low velocity keystrikes result in MIDI velocity of 1;
maximum MIDI velocity reduced
127
127
Setup Mode and the Setup Editor
The Key/Velocity (KEY/VEL) Page
7-15

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