To all who have helped, Thank you for sending so much information. I thought I might tell you the story that came with the piano. It was found in storage in UK docks. No one knows where it was destined to go or where it had come from. Although the piano case needed some TLC the internal mechanism was found to be in perfect condition and when played suprisingly in tune. I went looking for a new piano and liked the tone this Yamaha produced. I was worried about the in built disklavier unit but my husband thought it was a great novelty when he heard the demo disks play. It also convinced me that this piano has a wonderful tone, although I'm not sure my playing will ever match the great sounds I know now it is capable of producing. Robert I dont suppose climate will be a problem here in England but I think we may well have the electrics tested as Carol Beigel and John Burton have suggested it may be prudent to do so. The serial number on the inside of the piano is SX100RWnC and I have tried to attach 2 photographs with this message. If you have any further information I would love to hear from you again. Many thanks Regards Kathy Robert Welcyng <rwelcyng@...> wrote: Kathy, You may have purchased a so-called "gray-market" Disklavier--that is, one not marketed for the Americas or wherever you are. The catch is that neither Yamaha America nor Yamaha of Hamamatsu will support this expatriate instrument outside its marketing area. One purported reason has to do with the wood used not being compatible with the climate. As I understand it, many years back, Yamaha found themselves with a major warranty headache in the U.S. due to the instability of certain woods that they were using--which might be the real reason for this policy. I also understand that some unscrupulous profiteers have imported these pianos to sell in the U.S. You will not find them at authorized Yamaha dealers. Naturally, Yamaha, having burned their fingers once, want nothing to do with them. The encouraging news is that you do have a piano that you can play and that there are surely independent RPTs who will be willing to keep it in tune and make repairs. The Disklavier control units are solid state and are unlikely to fail; just don't insert a disk upside down and damage the drive. You are not going to be able to obtain updated ROMs, which only means that the features of your instrument remain fixed for life. I was not clear on whether you were able to play the demo disks that you have. If you can play a demo disk, you probably can play any Yamaha PianoSoft disk. (You will not want PianoSoft Plus disks.) You can buy PianoSoft disks from Hal Leonard, at Yamaha dealers, or vendors found on the Net. Sometimes members of our list sell them used. Good luck! Kathy Corden wrote: > Hello Disklavia users > > I wonder if anybody out there can help me, I have > recently purchased a 2nd hand Yamaha Piano I was told > that it is a Silent Disklavia unfortunately I have no > history of it apart from it was made in about > 1990-1992 > > The piano came with 3 standard floppy disks probally > demo disks from when it was new. I would like to be > able to get some more pre-recorded discs for the piano > but I have no idea what type to get as there seem to > be different types and I would not like to cause any > damage by using the wrong ones. > > There is no identification on the built in disclavia > unit and no instruction book, the controls have > Japaneese wording for on/off, play, pause, and record > etc. > > Thanks for any help you can give me. > > Kathy > > > > > __________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Yahoo! Tax Center - online filing with TurboTax > http://taxes.yahoo.com/ > > > To Post a message to the group, send it to: disklavier@... > > To Post a private message to Todd Muncy, the group's founder and moderator, send it to: > disklavier-owner@... > > To reach our group's web site go to: > http://Yahoogroups.com/group/disklavier > > Todd's family web site was completely rewritten in June 2001 and contains some fun disklavier content and links to midi sites among other things, The url is: > http://MuncyFamily.com > > THINKING OF LEAVING THE GROUP? > If you are thinking of unsubcribing because you are getting too much mail, go the the web site and change your email delivery option instead. That will fix the problem, while maintaining your access to the group. If you insist on leaving us completely send a blank email to: > disklavier-unsubscribe@... > > Know someone who wants to join? Have them send a blank email to: > disklavier-subscribe@... or give them this link: > http://Yahoogroups.com/group/disklavier/join > > > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ > > > > -- Robert Welcyng Anchorage, Alaska Yahoo! Groups SponsorADVERTISEMENT To Post a message to the group, send it to: disklavier@... To Post a private message to Todd Muncy, the group's founder and moderator, send it to: disklavier-owner@... To reach our group's web site go to: http://Yahoogroups.com/group/disklavier Todd's family web site was completely rewritten in June 2001 and contains some fun disklavier content and links to midi sites among other things, The url is: http://MuncyFamily.com THINKING OF LEAVING THE GROUP? If you are thinking of unsubcribing because you are getting too much mail, go the the web site and change your email delivery option instead. That will fix the problem, while maintaining your access to the group. If you insist on leaving us completely send a blank email to: disklavier-unsubscribe@... Know someone who wants to join? Have them send a blank email to: disklavier-subscribe@... or give them this link: http://Yahoogroups.com/group/disklavier/join Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. --------------------------------- Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Tax Center - online filing with TurboTax
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Re: [disklavier] Help for a new user
2002-04-08 by Kathy Corden
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