Member Recordings - Non Classical Pianist CornerĮVENTS! Piano Concerts, Recitals, Competitions.įun Stuff! - Parties, Tours, Projects & More.įorum Members Parties, Tours, Cruises, & M. MY NEW PIANO or KEYBOARD! - Share Your Story! Thanks so much for this information and for breaking it down so succinctly for me! Much appreciated!ĭigital Pianos - Electronic Pianos - Synths &a. > And of course the interface's line out L and R jacks go to the respective ones on the piano's line in. > The interface connects through USB to the laptop. > The piano's MIDI out goes to the interface's MIDI in. See 2.:Ĭhoose an audio interface that has 5-pin DIN MIDI ports, such as the PreSonus I mentioned before. In that case, these "workarounds" with the laptop's power shouldn't be necessary. These methods may mitigate the ground loop to some extent.īest is to go from MIDI out on the piano instead of USB to host. Also, counter-intuitively, when using the laptop's power supply, try to plug that into mains without earth, so two pins only. Try running the laptop off its battery to see if it disappears. Yes, that definitely sounds like the infamous ground loop issue. I think these two questions will pretty much be all the held I need on the subject, so thanks for bearing with me.įor proper sound and stereo image, you'll need a cable that splits from the 3,5mm stereo jack to two mono jacks on the piano's end. For the audio interface, how would that work? Does the USB host to USB-cord still go into the laptop for MIDI, and then the audio interface is connected to the laptop with one cord and back to the piano with another? How does this set up work? Just need a bit of guidance here. Is it the cord? Would getting the proper cord with two 6.35 mm line in plugs on one side and one 3.5 mm plug on the other fix it? Or is this humming & static the “ground loop” noise people talk about & will it happen regardless if you go the headphone jack to line-in route?Ģ. However, this way, he gets a lot of hum, and a bit of static and noise. It’s a temporary solution as it’s the only cord he had immediately, and it does produce sound. To get the sound from the laptop back to the GP310, he’s using an old 3.5mm to 6.35 cord he found the 3.5mm plug is in the laptop, and the 6.35 mm plug is in *only one* of the Line-in jacks. ![]() Right now, he’s got the GP310 plugged to his laptop using a USB-host to USB-C cord & ASIO4ALL works brilliantly. So thanks for suffering my inquiries, lol:ġ. I have two more questions, and I think this will be all the help that I need on this subject. In fact, the second scenario is the same as what you're used to with your Yamaha, the only difference being that in your case the audio interface is built into your piano and the Steinberg driver is the ASIO driver that comes with that (apparently, Yamaha sources their built-in interfaces from Steinberg, or so I'd assume).ĭo you have any recommendations for some good USB audio interfaces? In this case, ASIO4ALL should not be used, but the proprietary ASIO driver that comes with the purchased audio interface instead. > If you'd like a better sound quality, the next step is to use a USB audio Interface, and take the signal from the line outs of the audio interface to the line ins of the GP310. ![]() It is specifically designed to give the best (lowest) latency on a Windows computer where the internal sound chip is used. ![]() > If you take the signal from the headphone out to the GP310 line in, then you would use the ASIO4ALL driver. Thanks for any and all help on these subjects! I’m trying to be helpful to my friend, but I’d like to give him the best answers and I know I don’t have I understand, he is using a Windows laptop. For context, I have a Yamaha N1X and use their Steinberg, so I know nothing about the rest of this. He is experiencing latency using the default options for the VST, but nothing is installed like Steinberg. ![]() Is ASIO-4-All the best ASIO to go with for windows. I welcome both the simple and cheap options (as those will probably be the initial choice as he decides whether he likes this) and the more complicated/expensive/better options should he want to go full-time with his VST use.Ģ. Is it as simple as getting a cord to connect from the headphone out of the laptop to the line-in of the piano, or does that introduce latency, and is there a better way? How, then, does one get the sound from the VST to play through the speakers of the GP310? The Casio GP series doesn’t have an audio interface. I’ve introduced him to Garritan to start with as his VST, and he’s using it with his laptop. My friend bought a Casio GP-310, and I’m helping him set up. I have two questions that I’m hoping the experts here can help with:ġ.
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