I think I'm starting to get it... Drum trigger pads with an FSR (force sensitive resistor) rim sensor are referred to as dual-zone or stereo pads. "Dual-trigger" pads have a piezo rim trigger instead. For example, a Pintech dual-zone mesh drum should be able to handle my DTX 2.0 stereo trigger inputs, right? So with my dual-trigger inputs, I should be able to split out the signals from two piezos by either wiring the to a stereo plug properly OR by using a typical Y-splitter on the stereo cable, Correct? It seems like most of the Drum modules on the market have an abudance of stereo trigger inputs and a couple of dual-trigger inputs, why is it that Roland sells primarely dual-trigger mesh drums? At least that's what I've seen so far. Is it possible to buy or make a FSR (force sensitive resistor) ? emf <liberatusvirus@...> wrote: --- In DTXpress@yahoogroups.com, "Jerry" <jeraldlhenderson@y...> wrote: > > > I have a Yamaha DTX 2.0 (not DTXpress II), it has: 8 stereo + 2 dual > trigger inputs. All the pads are hooked up to the 8 stereo inputs > producing 2 sounds each (or 16 sounds). My kick drum is hooked up to > one of the dual trigger inputs and the other dual trigger is free. > > My questions are: If I hooked up a typical DIY dual-trigger drum > (piezo on the head, piezo on the rim) to one of the stereo trigger > inputs, that would not work, would it? You'd only get sound from one of the piezos. A stereo input expects a single piezo and an FSR on the rim that switches the piezo's sounds Two piezos throw it for a loop. > Out at http://drumbalaya.com/drum-module-comparison.asp it says DTX > 2.0 Dual-trigger devices use up two inputs (e.g. no dual-trigger > snare input) What does that mean? In order to use a dual-zone pad on the DTX2.0, you have to access input 9/10 or 11/12 (via a stereo cable if the piezos are wired tip/ring or via a splitter if the piezos are output separately) or to access two stereo inputs or one stereo and one-half of a dual-trigger input with two mono cables or a splitter, depending on the wiring. The use of stereo inputs for this purpose wastes the stereo inputs' rim function. > How do people typically do this then, hook-up the DIY snare to a Dual > trigger? See above. A dual-trigger snare frequently connects to input 2 and one-half of 9/10 or 11/12 to keep the snare intact for the user kits. Ed Community email addresses: Post message: DTXpress@yahoogroups.com Subscribe: DTXpress-subscribe@yahoogroups.com Unsubscribe: DTXpress-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com List owner: DTXpress-owner@yahoogroups.com Shortcut URL to this page: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DTXpress Alternate DTXpress site: http://www.dtxpressions.com Yahoo! Groups SponsorADVERTISEMENT --------------------------------- Yahoo! Groups Links To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DTXpress/ To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: DTXpress-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jerald L. Henderson jeraldlhenderson@... Shawnee, KS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ --------------------------------- Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail - Easier than ever with enhanced search. Learn more.
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Re: [DTXpress] Re: Questions about Stereo vs. Dual trigger inputs
2005-03-24 by Jerald Henderson
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