67550-Bell Springs Rd.
Garberville, CA 95542 Postal service only.
Laytonville, CA 95454 UPS only.
21220 92nd Place W., Edmonds, WA 98020
Spencer@...
Spencer@poodlex.com
Spencer@...
http://www.spencerserolls.com
http://www.poodlex.com
(425) 791-0309
(707) 223-8212
When I had a broken floppy for my mkii Yamaha wanted $315 for a replacement.I just hooked up computer thru MIDI, would never use floppy again, though I fixed it by jamming in a floppy disc really hard.I have thousands of MIDI files, even an excel database that will play music upon clicking.
Sam(212) 684-3304*(Sent from phone - please excuse brevity and typos.)
On Dec 13, 2016, at 11:02 AM, Knodel Construction knodelconst@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:Thanks Carol,
I will read up on this, at a glance looks pretty simple, but I usually get stuck on the computer stuff!But will try to get this to work as the player at this time is not functioning. And I am not ready for the upgrade of the DKC 850 at this time.MikeOn Dec 13, 2016, at 8:30 AM, Carol Beigel carol@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:try just replacing the floppy drive. The newer DKC850 works, but you would also need to buy speakers. Cost is about $2300.
Really try the link I just sent you. You can buy a MIDI interface and connecter for less than a $100. Send Mark Fontana some money for the PPFDBU software that converts those 750k double density floppies to standard MIDI files that you can store anywhere - preferable iCloud or Dropbox. Get an iOS device - even used. i.e. iPod. Get the free app Piano JukeBox and/or Sweet MIDI player in the app store. Even if you need to purchase an external floppy drive from Yamaha ($150) you have everything you need (except internet radio for Diskavier which you can’t get on that piano anyway).
Eventually you need to do this anyway.
Carol Beigel