Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive?
2014-10-09 by mqphan@...
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2014-10-09 by mqphan@...
Hi everyone:
I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step.
I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments.
Minh
2014-10-09 by Carol Beigel
I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet. Carol Beigel Sent from my iPhone
> On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, mqphan@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: > > > > Hi everyone: > > I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step. > > > > I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments. > > > Minh > > > >
2014-10-09 by Skanter123
After my floppy drive seemed to have died, then discovering that a new floppy drive from Yamaha was $335, I bought a USB floppy drive from Amazon for $10 and with the help of a conversion program, copied all my Yamaha disks to my computer and played them through MIDI, and stopped using floppies altogether. I subsequently fixed the old floppy drive by jamming a floppy into it really hard. Works perfectly now, but don't use it. Sam www.keyboardcollective.com
> On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, mqphan@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: > > Hi everyone: > > I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step. > > > > I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments. > > > Minh > >
2014-10-09 by Jon Arnold
Carol, I hear what you are saying and agree to an extent, but in my case where I want to upgrade my 100R to an 850 and Yamaha cannot even provide PINOUT information so that a cable can be made (purchasing one from Yamaha is apparently not an option, according to Yamaha customer service), so what other options are left?
From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2014 10:30 PM To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet. Carol Beigel Sent from my iPhone On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, mqphan@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: Hi everyone: I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step. I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments. Minh
2014-10-09 by Carol Beigel
Carol, I hear what you are saying and agree to an extent, but in my case where I want to upgrade my 100R to an 850 and Yamaha cannot even provide PINOUT information so that a cable can be made (purchasing one from Yamaha is apparently not an option, according to Yamaha customer service), so what other options are left?From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2014 10:30 PM
To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive?I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet.Carol Beigel
Sent from my iPhone
On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, mqphan@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:Hi everyone:
I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step.
I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments.
Minh
2014-10-10 by Jon Arnold
Carol, My Yamaha dealer told me that my grand piano is a "very late model Mark II but not quite XG", and that I SHOULD be able to *replace* the 100R with the 850. That would be my goal, since the 100R with floppies is quite old and the disk drive has gone out twice already, and even in conjunction with the Yamaha MU50 for the MIDI stuff, he tells me that 850 is far superior to the 100R/MU50 combo. The only problem I have is finding a cable that can convert the 9 pin from the piano to the 15 pin for the 850. The cable that comes in the conversion kit is virtually and literally unavailable anywhere, and apparently the computer 9-15 pin converter cable does not have the right pinouts, nor can Yamaha tell me what the pinouts should be??
From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2014 6:32 PM To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? I believe the 100R belongs to a MarkII Disklavier and requires the DKC850 to be an add-on thru MIDI cables to the existing control box. You cannot replace that box or get Disklavier radio. However, you can still buy Yamaha pianosoft discs = even on eBay if they still work. You would need the Yamaha floppy drive connected to one of the two USB ports on the DKC850 and put the Yamaha music into memory on the DKC850. Then put both the floppy drive and disks away somewhere. You can put 99 folders with 99 standard MIDI files (songs) in each on a USB thumb drive land play them using the DKC850.I believe that if you have speakers to be able to hear audio files (CDs and people singing) you can also play them on the DKC850. Also called Pianosoft plus audio. You can even get floppies that play the piano while playing the audio files on the CD called PianoSmaft. So you get all these new features, just not the Disklavier radio. Crappy! You con't even need to know anything about pin assignments because you use standard MIDI cables to connect the boxes - MIDI In to MIDI out. Carol On Oct 9, 2014, at 5:57 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: Carol, I hear what you are saying and agree to an extent, but in my case where I want to upgrade my 100R to an 850 and Yamaha cannot even provide PINOUT information so that a cable can be made (purchasing one from Yamaha is apparently not an option, according to Yamaha customer service), so what other options are left? From: <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com [ <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2014 10:30 PM To: <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet. Carol Beigel Sent from my iPhone On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, <mailto:mqphan@...> mqphan@... [disklavier] < <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: Hi everyone: I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step. I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments. Minh
2014-10-28 by mqphan@...
2014-10-28 by Carol Beigel
To my knowledge there is no such thing as a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”. The MkIIXG was the first to have updatable flash memory. Yamaha did this on purpose, requiring a DKV850 to be an add-on box and not a replacement for the MarkII. Even if you could make this cable it would not work because the operating systems are different. Learn to work with your MIDI in and outputs on the Disklavier you have. This means using conversion software to convert your current Yamaha ESEQ files to standard MIDI files. You can put many MIDI files on your computer and use playlist software to play them through your Disklavier. Just remember that your Disklavier can only see 99 of anything, such as 99 folders with 99 files. Have you read the Handbook of MIDI Player Tools 2003 version? You can find both versions at www.midiplayertools.com. It was written with early Disklaviers in mind. The guru of Disklavier technical support is Bill Brandon (on this list) and the guru of all things MIDI is George Litterst (also on this list and who wrote the fancy MIDI book when the MarkII came out!).
> On Oct 10, 2014, at 4:29 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: > > > > Carol, > > My Yamaha dealer told me that my grand piano is a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”, and that I SHOULD be able to *replace* the 100R with the 850. That would be my goal, since the 100R with floppies is quite old and the disk drive has gone out twice already, and even in conjunction with the Yamaha MU50 for the MIDI stuff, he tells me that 850 is far superior to the 100R/MU50 combo. The only problem I have is finding a cable that can convert the 9 pin from the piano to the 15 pin for the 850. The cable that comes in the conversion kit is virtually and literally unavailable anywhere, and apparently the computer 9-15 pin converter cable does not have the right pinouts, nor can Yamaha tell me what the pinouts should be?? > > > From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>] > Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2014 6:32 PM > To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> > Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? > > > I believe the 100R belongs to a MarkII Disklavier and requires the DKC850 to be an add-on thru MIDI cables to the existing control box. You cannot replace that box or get Disklavier radio. However, you can still buy Yamaha pianosoft discs = even on eBay if they still work. You would need the Yamaha floppy drive connected to one of the two USB ports on the DKC850 and put the Yamaha music into memory on the DKC850. Then put both the floppy drive and disks away somewhere. You can put 99 folders with 99 standard MIDI files (songs) in each on a USB thumb drive land play them using the DKC850.I believe that if you have speakers to be able to hear audio files (CDs and people singing) you can also play them on the DKC850. Also called Pianosoft plus audio. You can even get floppies that play the piano while playing the audio files on the CD called PianoSmaft. So you get all these new features, just not the Disklavier radio. Crappy! You con’t even need to know anything about pin assignments because you use standard MIDI cables to connect the boxes - MIDI In to MIDI out. > > > Carol > > > > On Oct 9, 2014, at 5:57 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@earthlink.net <mailto:jonarnold@...> [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>> wrote: > > > > > Carol, I hear what you are saying and agree to an extent, but in my case where I want to upgrade my 100R to an 850 and Yamaha cannot even provide PINOUT information so that a cable can be made (purchasing one from Yamaha is apparently not an option, according to Yamaha customer service), so what other options are left? > > > From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>] > Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2014 10:30 PM > To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> > Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? > > > I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet. > > Carol Beigel > > > Sent from my iPhone > > On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, mqphan@... <mailto:mqphan@...> [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>> wrote: > >> Hi everyone: >> >> I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step. >> >> >> >> I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments. >> >> >> Minh >> > > > > > > >
2014-10-28 by Skanter123
I will second everything that Carol has said. I have an MPX100II which is a late, non-XG Disklavier. IMO the DKV 850, besides being very expensive, would add little functionality to my instrument. Connecting it to my computer through MIDI cables has given me pretty much all the features I need, especially since I have little interest in Disklavier Radio, TV, et. al. It also makes it quite easy to use the terrific applications written by the talented people here, mentioned by Carol, whose MIDI/DKV information is comprehensive. Thanks Carol! BTW, I do listen to multi-track and live piano playback using a MIDI sequencer and virtual instruments on my computer. Its simple to add a 500ms delay to the other tracks, and sounds great.
> On Oct 28, 2014, at 12:23 AM, Carol Beigel carol@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: > > To my knowledge there is no such thing as a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”. The MkIIXG was the first to have updatable flash memory. Yamaha did this on purpose, requiring a DKV850 to be an add-on box and not a replacement for the MarkII. Even if you could make this cable it would not work because the operating systems are different. Learn to work with your MIDI in and outputs on the Disklavier you have. This means using conversion software to convert your current Yamaha ESEQ files to standard MIDI files. You can put many MIDI files on your computer and use playlist software to play them through your Disklavier. Just remember that your Disklavier can only see 99 of anything, such as 99 folders with 99 files. Have you read the Handbook of MIDI Player Tools 2003 version? You can find both versions at www.midiplayertools.com. It was written with early Disklaviers in mind. The guru of Disklavier technical support is Bill Brandon (on this list) and the guru of all things MIDI is George Litterst (also on this list and who wrote the fancy MIDI book when the MarkII came out!). > > > >> On Oct 10, 2014, at 4:29 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: >> >> >> >> Carol, >> >> My Yamaha dealer told me that my grand piano is a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”, and that I SHOULD be able to *replace* the 100R with the 850. That would be my goal, since the 100R with floppies is quite old and the disk drive has gone out twice already, and even in conjunction with the Yamaha MU50 for the MIDI stuff, he tells me that 850 is far superior to the 100R/MU50 combo. The only problem I have is finding a cable that can convert the 9 pin from the piano to the 15 pin for the 850. The cable that comes in the conversion kit is virtually and literally unavailable anywhere, and apparently the computer 9-15 pin converter cable does not have the right pinouts, nor can Yamaha tell me what the pinouts should be?? >> >> >> From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] >> Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2014 6:32 PM >> To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com >> Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? >> >> >> I believe the 100R belongs to a MarkII Disklavier and requires the DKC850 to be an add-on thru MIDI cables to the existing control box. You cannot replace that box or get Disklavier radio. However, you can still buy Yamaha pianosoft discs = even on eBay if they still work. You would need the Yamaha floppy drive connected to one of the two USB ports on the DKC850 and put the Yamaha music into memory on the DKC850. Then put both the floppy drive and disks away somewhere. You can put 99 folders with 99 standard MIDI files (songs) in each on a USB thumb drive land play them using the DKC850.I believe that if you have speakers to be able to hear audio files (CDs and people singing) you can also play them on the DKC850. Also called Pianosoft plus audio. You can even get floppies that play the piano while playing the audio files on the CD called PianoSmaft. So you get all these new features, just not the Disklavier radio. Crappy! You con’t even need to know anything about pin assignments because you use standard MIDI cables to connect the boxes - MIDI In to MIDI out. >> >> >> Carol >> >> >> >> On Oct 9, 2014, at 5:57 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@...m> wrote: >> >> >> >> >> Carol, I hear what you are saying and agree to an extent, but in my case where I want to upgrade my 100R to an 850 and Yamaha cannot even provide PINOUT information so that a cable can be made (purchasing one from Yamaha is apparently not an option, according to Yamaha customer service), so what other options are left? >> >> >> From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] >> Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2014 10:30 PM >> To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com >> Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? >> >> >> I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet. >> >> Carol Beigel >> >> >> Sent from my iPhone >> >>> On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, mqphan@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: >>> >>> Hi everyone: >>> >>> I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step. >>> >>> >>> >>> I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments. >>> >>> >>> Minh >>> >> >> >> >> >> >> > >
2014-10-28 by Jon Arnold
Thanks Carol. The statement about “very late model Mark II but not quite XG” is pretty much a direct quote from Yahama Disklavier tech support via phone. I have no idea whether it really exists or not, that is just what was said to me by Yamaha and I took it at face value. This information is helpful, thank you, as my Yamaha dealer has been far less than helpful, or even seemingly interested in resolving this problem. Knowing that the 850 cannot be used as a direct replacement for the 100R definitely helps since I can eliminate that from any consideration list. But what my Yamaha dealer DID say, and I would like to confirm here if possible, is that the 850 is far better than my 100R in terms of music playback, and especially in terms of the MIDI stuff (ie, other instruments like drums, bass, violins, etc) than my 100R with the MU50, so my best bet would be to use *BOTH* the 100R and the 850, plugging the 850 into the input port on the 100R, and disconnecting the MU50. That would *SEEM* to make sense, especially given what you said below, but is that viable? The other problem is that there does not seem to be Yamaha competence within 200 miles of here (near Cocoa Beach, FL) that could or would do a service call?? The final problem, where I pretty much gave up and am considering just selling the whole piano, is that when the local dealer sent a non-disklavier-savvy tech out who tried to connect it as above – it worked and sounded absolutely beautiful for about a minute or two, then the 100R display showed: Piano Power Off! (01:55) (PWM OVER) _ ESBL And it stops. That indicates what? A problem in the 100R to be sure, but what and how to resolve it, especially with no disklavier tech in this part of the universe? Thanks Jon
From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2014 12:24 AM To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com Cc: Carol Beigel Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? To my knowledge there is no such thing as a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”. The MkIIXG was the first to have updatable flash memory. Yamaha did this on purpose, requiring a DKV850 to be an add-on box and not a replacement for the MarkII. Even if you could make this cable it would not work because the operating systems are different. Learn to work with your MIDI in and outputs on the Disklavier you have. This means using conversion software to convert your current Yamaha ESEQ files to standard MIDI files. You can put many MIDI files on your computer and use playlist software to play them through your Disklavier. Just remember that your Disklavier can only see 99 of anything, such as 99 folders with 99 files. Have you read the Handbook of MIDI Player Tools 2003 version? You can find both versions at www.midiplayertools.com. It was written with early Disklaviers in mind. The guru of Disklavier technical support is Bill Brandon (on this list) and the guru of all things MIDI is George Litterst (also on this list and who wrote the fancy MIDI book when the MarkII came out!). On Oct 10, 2014, at 4:29 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: Carol, My Yamaha dealer told me that my grand piano is a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”, and that I SHOULD be able to *replace* the 100R with the 850. That would be my goal, since the 100R with floppies is quite old and the disk drive has gone out twice already, and even in conjunction with the Yamaha MU50 for the MIDI stuff, he tells me that 850 is far superior to the 100R/MU50 combo. The only problem I have is finding a cable that can convert the 9 pin from the piano to the 15 pin for the 850. The cable that comes in the conversion kit is virtually and literally unavailable anywhere, and apparently the computer 9-15 pin converter cable does not have the right pinouts, nor can Yamaha tell me what the pinouts should be?? From: <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com [ <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2014 6:32 PM To: <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? I believe the 100R belongs to a MarkII Disklavier and requires the DKC850 to be an add-on thru MIDI cables to the existing control box. You cannot replace that box or get Disklavier radio. However, you can still buy Yamaha pianosoft discs = even on eBay if they still work. You would need the Yamaha floppy drive connected to one of the two USB ports on the DKC850 and put the Yamaha music into memory on the DKC850. Then put both the floppy drive and disks away somewhere. You can put 99 folders with 99 standard MIDI files (songs) in each on a USB thumb drive land play them using the DKC850.I believe that if you have speakers to be able to hear audio files (CDs and people singing) you can also play them on the DKC850. Also called Pianosoft plus audio. You can even get floppies that play the piano while playing the audio files on the CD called PianoSmaft. So you get all these new features, just not the Disklavier radio. Crappy! You con’t even need to know anything about pin assignments because you use standard MIDI cables to connect the boxes - MIDI In to MIDI out. Carol On Oct 9, 2014, at 5:57 PM, 'Jon Arnold' <mailto:jonarnold@...> jonarnold@... [disklavier] < <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: Carol, I hear what you are saying and agree to an extent, but in my case where I want to upgrade my 100R to an 850 and Yamaha cannot even provide PINOUT information so that a cable can be made (purchasing one from Yamaha is apparently not an option, according to Yamaha customer service), so what other options are left? From: <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com [ <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2014 10:30 PM To: <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet. Carol Beigel Sent from my iPhone On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, <mailto:mqphan@...> mqphan@... [disklavier] < <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: Hi everyone: I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step. I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments. Minh
2014-10-28 by James Fry
Thanks Carol. The statement about “very late model Mark II but not quite XG” is pretty much a direct quote from Yahama Disklavier tech support via phone. I have no idea whether it really exists or not, that is just what was said to me by Yamaha and I took it at face value.
This information is helpful, thank you, as my Yamaha dealer has been far less than helpful, or even seemingly interested in resolving this problem. Knowing that the 850 cannot be used as a direct replacement for the 100R definitely helps since I can eliminate that from any consideration list.
But what my Yamaha dealer DID say, and I would like to confirm here if possible, is that the 850 is far better than my 100R in terms of music playback, and especially in terms of the MIDI stuff (ie, other instruments like drums, bass, violins, etc) than my 100R with the MU50, so my best bet would be to use *BOTH* the 100R and the 850, plugging the 850 into the input port on the 100R, and disconnecting the MU50. That would *SEEM* to make sense, especially given what you said below, but is that viable?
The other problem is that there does not seem to be Yamaha competence within 200 miles of here (near Cocoa Beach, FL) that could or would do a service call??
The final problem, where I pretty much gave up and am considering just selling the whole piano, is that when the local dealer sent a non-disklavier-savvy tech out who tried to connect it as above – it worked and sounded absolutely beautiful for about a minute or two, then the 100R display showed:
Piano Power Off! (01:55)
(PWM OVER) _ ESBL
And it stops. That indicates what? A problem in the 100R to be sure, but what and how to resolve it, especially with no disklavier tech in this part of the universe?
Thanks
Jon
From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2014 12:24 AM
To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com
Cc: Carol Beigel
Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive?
To my knowledge there is no such thing as a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”. The MkIIXG was the first to have updatable flash memory. Yamaha did this on purpose, requiring a DKV850 to be an add-on box and not a replacement for the MarkII. Even if you could make this cable it would not work because the operating systems are different. Learn to work with your MIDI in and outputs on the Disklavier you have. This means using conversion software to convert your current Yamaha ESEQ files to standard MIDI files. You can put many MIDI files on your computer and use playlist software to play them through your Disklavier. Just remember that your Disklavier can only see 99 of anything, such as 99 folders with 99 files. Have you read the Handbook of MIDI Player Tools 2003 version? You can find both versions at www.midiplayertools.com. It was written with early Disklaviers in mind. The guru of Disklavier technical support is Bill Brandon (on this list) and the guru of all things MIDI is George Litterst (also on this list and who wrote the fancy MIDI book when the MarkII came out!).
On Oct 10, 2014, at 4:29 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Carol,
My Yamaha dealer told me that my grand piano is a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”, and that I SHOULD be able to *replace* the 100R with the 850. That would be my goal, since the 100R with floppies is quite old and the disk drive has gone out twice already, and even in conjunction with the Yamaha MU50 for the MIDI stuff, he tells me that 850 is far superior to the 100R/MU50 combo. The only problem I have is finding a cable that can convert the 9 pin from the piano to the 15 pin for the 850. The cable that comes in the conversion kit is virtually and literally unavailable anywhere, and apparently the computer 9-15 pin converter cable does not have the right pinouts, nor can Yamaha tell me what the pinouts should be??
From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2014 6:32 PM
To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive?
I believe the 100R belongs to a MarkII Disklavier and requires the DKC850 to be an add-on thru MIDI cables to the existing control box. You cannot replace that box or get Disklavier radio. However, you can still buy Yamaha pianosoft discs = even on eBay if they still work. You would need the Yamaha floppy drive connected to one of the two USB ports on the DKC850 and put the Yamaha music into memory on the DKC850. Then put both the floppy drive and disks away somewhere. You can put 99 folders with 99 standard MIDI files (songs) in each on a USB thumb drive land play them using the DKC850.I believe that if you have speakers to be able to hear audio files (CDs and people singing) you can also play them on the DKC850. Also called Pianosoft plus audio. You can even get floppies that play the piano while playing the audio files on the CD called PianoSmaft. So you get all these new features, just not the Disklavier radio. Crappy! You con’t even need to know anything about pin assignments because you use standard MIDI cables to connect the boxes - MIDI In to MIDI out.
Carol
On Oct 9, 2014, at 5:57 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Carol, I hear what you are saying and agree to an extent, but in my case where I want to upgrade my 100R to an 850 and Yamaha cannot even provide PINOUT information so that a cable can be made (purchasing one from Yamaha is apparently not an option, according to Yamaha customer service), so what other options are left?
From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2014 10:30 PM
To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive?
I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet.
Carol Beigel
Sent from my iPhone
On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, mqphan@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:Hi everyone:
I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step.
I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments.
Minh
2014-10-28 by Sam Kanter
Someone on the pianoworld forum (link below) had a very similar message and checked in the service manual which indicated it was a power supply problem, which is in the piano (as Bill Brandom has already suggested in your other thread). Perhaps you can obtain a service manual to check further?http://www.pianoworld.com/forum/ubbthreads.php/topics/1546537/Problems%2520with%2520Yamaha%2520MX100B%2520wi.htmlI was tempted by the DKC850 for my MarkIIXG U1, but at the equivalent of over $2200 USD and almost a third of the value of the piano, it seems a little steep when it is available in Japan for around $879 (inc local taxes, but not UK import).I've just gone with a gigabyte brix mini PC with a USB midi interface - seems to do everything I want at the moment, and I can play around with softsynths. Pianoteq does a great job of replacing the dated silent piano sample too...Good luck anyway!On 28 October 2014 12:36, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Thanks Carol. The statement about “very late model Mark II but not quite XG” is pretty much a direct quote from Yahama Disklavier tech support via phone. I have no idea whether it really exists or not, that is just what was said to me by Yamaha and I took it at face value.
This information is helpful, thank you, as my Yamaha dealer has been far less than helpful, or even seemingly interested in resolving this problem. Knowing that the 850 cannot be used as a direct replacement for the 100R definitely helps since I can eliminate that from any consideration list.
But what my Yamaha dealer DID say, and I would like to confirm here if possible, is that the 850 is far better than my 100R in terms of music playback, and especially in terms of the MIDI stuff (ie, other instruments like drums, bass, violins, etc) than my 100R with the MU50, so my best bet would be to use *BOTH* the 100R and the 850, plugging the 850 into the input port on the 100R, and disconnecting the MU50. That would *SEEM* to make sense, especially given what you said below, but is that viable?
The other problem is that there does not seem to be Yamaha competence within 200 miles of here (near Cocoa Beach, FL) that could or would do a service call??
The final problem, where I pretty much gave up and am considering just selling the whole piano, is that when the local dealer sent a non-disklavier-savvy tech out who tried to connect it as above – it worked and sounded absolutely beautiful for about a minute or two, then the 100R display showed:
Piano Power Off! (01:55)
(PWM OVER) _ ESBL
And it stops. That indicates what? A problem in the 100R to be sure, but what and how to resolve it, especially with no disklavier tech in this part of the universe?
Thanks
Jon
From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2014 12:24 AM
To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com
Cc: Carol Beigel
Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive?
To my knowledge there is no such thing as a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”. The MkIIXG was the first to have updatable flash memory. Yamaha did this on purpose, requiring a DKV850 to be an add-on box and not a replacement for the MarkII. Even if you could make this cable it would not work because the operating systems are different. Learn to work with your MIDI in and outputs on the Disklavier you have. This means using conversion software to convert your current Yamaha ESEQ files to standard MIDI files. You can put many MIDI files on your computer and use playlist software to play them through your Disklavier. Just remember that your Disklavier can only see 99 of anything, such as 99 folders with 99 files. Have you read the Handbook of MIDI Player Tools 2003 version? You can find both versions at www.midiplayertools.com. It was written with early Disklaviers in mind. The guru of Disklavier technical support is Bill Brandon (on this list) and the guru of all things MIDI is George Litterst (also on this list and who wrote the fancy MIDI book when the MarkII came out!).
On Oct 10, 2014, at 4:29 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Carol,
My Yamaha dealer told me that my grand piano is a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”, and that I SHOULD be able to *replace* the 100R with the 850. That would be my goal, since the 100R with floppies is quite old and the disk drive has gone out twice already, and even in conjunction with the Yamaha MU50 for the MIDI stuff, he tells me that 850 is far superior to the 100R/MU50 combo. The only problem I have is finding a cable that can convert the 9 pin from the piano to the 15 pin for the 850. The cable that comes in the conversion kit is virtually and literally unavailable anywhere, and apparently the computer 9-15 pin converter cable does not have the right pinouts, nor can Yamaha tell me what the pinouts should be??
From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2014 6:32 PM
To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive?
I believe the 100R belongs to a MarkII Disklavier and requires the DKC850 to be an add-on thru MIDI cables to the existing control box. You cannot replace that box or get Disklavier radio. However, you can still buy Yamaha pianosoft discs = even on eBay if they still work. You would need the Yamaha floppy drive connected to one of the two USB ports on the DKC850 and put the Yamaha music into memory on the DKC850. Then put both the floppy drive and disks away somewhere. You can put 99 folders with 99 standard MIDI files (songs) in each on a USB thumb drive land play them using the DKC850.I believe that if you have speakers to be able to hear audio files (CDs and people singing) you can also play them on the DKC850. Also called Pianosoft plus audio. You can even get floppies that play the piano while playing the audio files on the CD called PianoSmaft. So you get all these new features, just not the Disklavier radio. Crappy! You con’t even need to know anything about pin assignments because you use standard MIDI cables to connect the boxes - MIDI In to MIDI out.
Carol
On Oct 9, 2014, at 5:57 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Carol, I hear what you are saying and agree to an extent, but in my case where I want to upgrade my 100R to an 850 and Yamaha cannot even provide PINOUT information so that a cable can be made (purchasing one from Yamaha is apparently not an option, according to Yamaha customer service), so what other options are left?
From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2014 10:30 PM
To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive?
I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet.
Carol Beigel
Sent from my iPhone
On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, mqphan@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:Hi everyone:
I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step.
I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments.
Minh
2014-10-28 by Sam Kanter
Yes Sam www.keyboardcollective.com (212) 684-3304 Q
> On Oct 28, 2014, at 2:01 PM, James Fry groups@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: > > Someone on the pianoworld forum (link below) had a very similar message and checked in the service manual which indicated it was a power supply problem, which is in the piano (as Bill Brandom has already suggested in your other thread). Perhaps you can obtain a service manual to check further? > > http://www.pianoworld.com/forum/ubbthreads.php/topics/1546537/Problems%2520with%2520Yamaha%2520MX100B%2520wi.html > > I was tempted by the DKC850 for my MarkIIXG U1, but at the equivalent of over $2200 USD and almost a third of the value of the piano, it seems a little steep when it is available in Japan for around $879 (inc local taxes, but not UK import). > > I've just gone with a gigabyte brix mini PC with a USB midi interface - seems to do everything I want at the moment, and I can play around with softsynths. Pianoteq does a great job of replacing the dated silent piano sample too... > > Good luck anyway! > > > > >> On 28 October 2014 12:36, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: >> >> >> Thanks Carol. The statement about “very late model Mark II but not quite XG” is pretty much a direct quote from Yahama Disklavier tech support via phone. I have no idea whether it really exists or not, that is just what was said to me by Yamaha and I took it at face value. >> >> >> >> This information is helpful, thank you, as my Yamaha dealer has been far less than helpful, or even seemingly interested in resolving this problem. Knowing that the 850 cannot be used as a direct replacement for the 100R definitely helps since I can eliminate that from any consideration list. >> >> >> >> But what my Yamaha dealer DID say, and I would like to confirm here if possible, is that the 850 is far better than my 100R in terms of music playback, and especially in terms of the MIDI stuff (ie, other instruments like drums, bass, violins, etc) than my 100R with the MU50, so my best bet would be to use *BOTH* the 100R and the 850, plugging the 850 into the input port on the 100R, and disconnecting the MU50. That would *SEEM* to make sense, especially given what you said below, but is that viable? >> >> >> >> The other problem is that there does not seem to be Yamaha competence within 200 miles of here (near Cocoa Beach, FL) that could or would do a service call?? >> >> >> >> The final problem, where I pretty much gave up and am considering just selling the whole piano, is that when the local dealer sent a non-disklavier-savvy tech out who tried to connect it as above – it worked and sounded absolutely beautiful for about a minute or two, then the 100R display showed: >> >> >> >> Piano Power Off! (01:55) >> >> (PWM OVER) _ ESBL >> >> >> >> And it stops. That indicates what? A problem in the 100R to be sure, but what and how to resolve it, especially with no disklavier tech in this part of the universe? >> >> >> >> Thanks >> >> Jon >> >> >> >> >> >> From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] >> Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2014 12:24 AM >> To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com >> Cc: Carol Beigel >> >> >> Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? >> >> >> >> >> To my knowledge there is no such thing as a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”. The MkIIXG was the first to have updatable flash memory. Yamaha did this on purpose, requiring a DKV850 to be an add-on box and not a replacement for the MarkII. Even if you could make this cable it would not work because the operating systems are different. Learn to work with your MIDI in and outputs on the Disklavier you have. This means using conversion software to convert your current Yamaha ESEQ files to standard MIDI files. You can put many MIDI files on your computer and use playlist software to play them through your Disklavier. Just remember that your Disklavier can only see 99 of anything, such as 99 folders with 99 files. Have you read the Handbook of MIDI Player Tools 2003 version? You can find both versions at www.midiplayertools.com. It was written with early Disklaviers in mind. The guru of Disklavier technical support is Bill Brandon (on this list) and the guru of all things MIDI is George Litterst (also on this list and who wrote the fancy MIDI book when the MarkII came out!). >> >> >> >> >> >> On Oct 10, 2014, at 4:29 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Carol, >> >> >> >> My Yamaha dealer told me that my grand piano is a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”, and that I SHOULD be able to *replace* the 100R with the 850. That would be my goal, since the 100R with floppies is quite old and the disk drive has gone out twice already, and even in conjunction with the Yamaha MU50 for the MIDI stuff, he tells me that 850 is far superior to the 100R/MU50 combo. The only problem I have is finding a cable that can convert the 9 pin from the piano to the 15 pin for the 850. The cable that comes in the conversion kit is virtually and literally unavailable anywhere, and apparently the computer 9-15 pin converter cable does not have the right pinouts, nor can Yamaha tell me what the pinouts should be?? >> >> >> >> >> >> From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] >> Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2014 6:32 PM >> To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com >> Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? >> >> >> >> >> >> I believe the 100R belongs to a MarkII Disklavier and requires the DKC850 to be an add-on thru MIDI cables to the existing control box. You cannot replace that box or get Disklavier radio. However, you can still buy Yamaha pianosoft discs = even on eBay if they still work. You would need the Yamaha floppy drive connected to one of the two USB ports on the DKC850 and put the Yamaha music into memory on the DKC850. Then put both the floppy drive and disks away somewhere. You can put 99 folders with 99 standard MIDI files (songs) in each on a USB thumb drive land play them using the DKC850.I believe that if you have speakers to be able to hear audio files (CDs and people singing) you can also play them on the DKC850. Also called Pianosoft plus audio. You can even get floppies that play the piano while playing the audio files on the CD called PianoSmaft. So you get all these new features, just not the Disklavier radio. Crappy! You con’t even need to know anything about pin assignments because you use standard MIDI cables to connect the boxes - MIDI In to MIDI out. >> >> >> >> Carol >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> On Oct 9, 2014, at 5:57 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Carol, I hear what you are saying and agree to an extent, but in my case where I want to upgrade my 100R to an 850 and Yamaha cannot even provide PINOUT information so that a cable can be made (purchasing one from Yamaha is apparently not an option, according to Yamaha customer service), so what other options are left? >> >> >> >> >> >> From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] >> Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2014 10:30 PM >> To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com >> Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? >> >> >> >> >> >> I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet. >> >> >> >> Carol Beigel >> >> >> >> Sent from my iPhone >> >> >> On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, mqphan@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: >> >> Hi everyone: >> >> I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step. >> >> >> >> I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments. >> >> >> Minh >> > >
2014-10-29 by PianoBench@...
Good morning, everyone. Jon, I recommend that you contact Steve Winder (swinder617@... <mailto:swinder617@...>), an expert piano and Disklavier technician who can serve your area. He gave me permission to post his email here. Regards, PianoBench
> On Oct 28, 2014, at 7:36 AM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: > > > Thanks Carol. The statement about “very late model Mark II but not quite XG” is pretty much a direct quote from Yahama Disklavier tech support via phone. I have no idea whether it really exists or not, that is just what was said to me by Yamaha and I took it at face value. > > > > This information is helpful, thank you, as my Yamaha dealer has been far less than helpful, or even seemingly interested in resolving this problem. Knowing that the 850 cannot be used as a direct replacement for the 100R definitely helps since I can eliminate that from any consideration list. > > > > But what my Yamaha dealer DID say, and I would like to confirm here if possible, is that the 850 is far better than my 100R in terms of music playback, and especially in terms of the MIDI stuff (ie, other instruments like drums, bass, violins, etc) than my 100R with the MU50, so my best bet would be to use *BOTH* the 100R and the 850, plugging the 850 into the input port on the 100R, and disconnecting the MU50. That would *SEEM* to make sense, especially given what you said below, but is that viable? > > > > The other problem is that there does not seem to be Yamaha competence within 200 miles of here (near Cocoa Beach, FL) that could or would do a service call?? > > > > The final problem, where I pretty much gave up and am considering just selling the whole piano, is that when the local dealer sent a non-disklavier-savvy tech out who tried to connect it as above – it worked and sounded absolutely beautiful for about a minute or two, then the 100R display showed: > > > > Piano Power Off! (01:55) > > (PWM OVER) _ ESBL > > > > And it stops. That indicates what? A problem in the 100R to be sure, but what and how to resolve it, especially with no disklavier tech in this part of the universe? > > > > Thanks > > Jon > > > > > > From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>] > Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2014 12:24 AM > To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> > Cc: Carol Beigel > Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? > > > > > > To my knowledge there is no such thing as a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”. The MkIIXG was the first to have updatable flash memory. Yamaha did this on purpose, requiring a DKV850 to be an add-on box and not a replacement for the MarkII. Even if you could make this cable it would not work because the operating systems are different. Learn to work with your MIDI in and outputs on the Disklavier you have. This means using conversion software to convert your current Yamaha ESEQ files to standard MIDI files. You can put many MIDI files on your computer and use playlist software to play them through your Disklavier. Just remember that your Disklavier can only see 99 of anything, such as 99 folders with 99 files. Have you read the Handbook of MIDI Player Tools 2003 version? You can find both versions at www.midiplayertools.com <http://www.midiplayertools.com/>. It was written with early Disklaviers in mind. The guru of Disklavier technical support is Bill Brandon (on this list) and the guru of all things MIDI is George Litterst (also on this list and who wrote the fancy MIDI book when the MarkII came out!). > > > > > >> On Oct 10, 2014, at 4:29 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... <mailto:jonarnold@...> [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>> wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Carol, >> >> >> >> My Yamaha dealer told me that my grand piano is a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”, and that I SHOULD be able to *replace* the 100R with the 850. That would be my goal, since the 100R with floppies is quite old and the disk drive has gone out twice already, and even in conjunction with the Yamaha MU50 for the MIDI stuff, he tells me that 850 is far superior to the 100R/MU50 combo. The only problem I have is finding a cable that can convert the 9 pin from the piano to the 15 pin for the 850. The cable that comes in the conversion kit is virtually and literally unavailable anywhere, and apparently the computer 9-15 pin converter cable does not have the right pinouts, nor can Yamaha tell me what the pinouts should be?? >> >> >> >> >> >> From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>] >> Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2014 6:32 PM >> To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> >> Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? >> >> >> >> >> >> I believe the 100R belongs to a MarkII Disklavier and requires the DKC850 to be an add-on thru MIDI cables to the existing control box. You cannot replace that box or get Disklavier radio. However, you can still buy Yamaha pianosoft discs = even on eBay if they still work. You would need the Yamaha floppy drive connected to one of the two USB ports on the DKC850 and put the Yamaha music into memory on the DKC850. Then put both the floppy drive and disks away somewhere. You can put 99 folders with 99 standard MIDI files (songs) in each on a USB thumb drive land play them using the DKC850.I believe that if you have speakers to be able to hear audio files (CDs and people singing) you can also play them on the DKC850. Also called Pianosoft plus audio. You can even get floppies that play the piano while playing the audio files on the CD called PianoSmaft. So you get all these new features, just not the Disklavier radio. Crappy! You con’t even need to know anything about pin assignments because you use standard MIDI cables to connect the boxes - MIDI In to MIDI out. >> >> >> >> Carol >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> On Oct 9, 2014, at 5:57 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... <mailto:jonarnold@...> [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>> wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Carol, I hear what you are saying and agree to an extent, but in my case where I want to upgrade my 100R to an 850 and Yamaha cannot even provide PINOUT information so that a cable can be made (purchasing one from Yamaha is apparently not an option, according to Yamaha customer service), so what other options are left? >> >> >> >> >> >> From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>] >> Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2014 10:30 PM >> To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> >> Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? >> >> >> >> >> >> I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet. >> >> >> >> Carol Beigel >> >> >> >> Sent from my iPhone >> >> >> On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, mqphan@... <mailto:mqphan@...> [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>> wrote: >> >>> Hi everyone: >>> >>> I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step. >>> >>> >>> >>> I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments. >>> >>> >>> Minh >>> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> > > > > > >
2014-10-29 by Jon Arnold
Thanks PianoBench, will contact him immediately. The LAST thing I want to do is sell the piano, but the SECOND LAST thing I want is a super nice looking Yamaha grand piano in my living room with a disklavier that is useless.
From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 29, 2014 8:33 AM To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? Good morning, everyone. Jon, I recommend that you contact Steve Winder (swinder617@...), an expert piano and Disklavier technician who can serve your area. He gave me permission to post his email here. Regards, PianoBench On Oct 28, 2014, at 7:36 AM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@... [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: Thanks Carol. The statement about “very late model Mark II but not quite XG” is pretty much a direct quote from Yahama Disklavier tech support via phone. I have no idea whether it really exists or not, that is just what was said to me by Yamaha and I took it at face value. This information is helpful, thank you, as my Yamaha dealer has been far less than helpful, or even seemingly interested in resolving this problem. Knowing that the 850 cannot be used as a direct replacement for the 100R definitely helps since I can eliminate that from any consideration list. But what my Yamaha dealer DID say, and I would like to confirm here if possible, is that the 850 is far better than my 100R in terms of music playback, and especially in terms of the MIDI stuff (ie, other instruments like drums, bass, violins, etc) than my 100R with the MU50, so my best bet would be to use *BOTH* the 100R and the 850, plugging the 850 into the input port on the 100R, and disconnecting the MU50. That would *SEEM* to make sense, especially given what you said below, but is that viable? The other problem is that there does not seem to be Yamaha competence within 200 miles of here (near Cocoa Beach, FL) that could or would do a service call?? The final problem, where I pretty much gave up and am considering just selling the whole piano, is that when the local dealer sent a non-disklavier-savvy tech out who tried to connect it as above – it worked and sounded absolutely beautiful for about a minute or two, then the 100R display showed: Piano Power Off! (01:55) (PWM OVER) _ ESBL And it stops. That indicates what? A problem in the 100R to be sure, but what and how to resolve it, especially with no disklavier tech in this part of the universe? Thanks Jon From: <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com [ <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2014 12:24 AM To: <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com Cc: Carol Beigel Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? To my knowledge there is no such thing as a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”. The MkIIXG was the first to have updatable flash memory. Yamaha did this on purpose, requiring a DKV850 to be an add-on box and not a replacement for the MarkII. Even if you could make this cable it would not work because the operating systems are different. Learn to work with your MIDI in and outputs on the Disklavier you have. This means using conversion software to convert your current Yamaha ESEQ files to standard MIDI files. You can put many MIDI files on your computer and use playlist software to play them through your Disklavier. Just remember that your Disklavier can only see 99 of anything, such as 99 folders with 99 files. Have you read the Handbook of MIDI Player Tools 2003 version? You can find both versions at <http://www.midiplayertools.com/> www.midiplayertools.com. It was written with early Disklaviers in mind. The guru of Disklavier technical support is Bill Brandon (on this list) and the guru of all things MIDI is George Litterst (also on this list and who wrote the fancy MIDI book when the MarkII came out!). On Oct 10, 2014, at 4:29 PM, 'Jon Arnold' <mailto:jonarnold@...> jonarnold@... [disklavier] < <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: Carol, My Yamaha dealer told me that my grand piano is a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”, and that I SHOULD be able to *replace* the 100R with the 850. That would be my goal, since the 100R with floppies is quite old and the disk drive has gone out twice already, and even in conjunction with the Yamaha MU50 for the MIDI stuff, he tells me that 850 is far superior to the 100R/MU50 combo. The only problem I have is finding a cable that can convert the 9 pin from the piano to the 15 pin for the 850. The cable that comes in the conversion kit is virtually and literally unavailable anywhere, and apparently the computer 9-15 pin converter cable does not have the right pinouts, nor can Yamaha tell me what the pinouts should be?? From: <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com [ <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2014 6:32 PM To: <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? I believe the 100R belongs to a MarkII Disklavier and requires the DKC850 to be an add-on thru MIDI cables to the existing control box. You cannot replace that box or get Disklavier radio. However, you can still buy Yamaha pianosoft discs = even on eBay if they still work. You would need the Yamaha floppy drive connected to one of the two USB ports on the DKC850 and put the Yamaha music into memory on the DKC850. Then put both the floppy drive and disks away somewhere. You can put 99 folders with 99 standard MIDI files (songs) in each on a USB thumb drive land play them using the DKC850.I believe that if you have speakers to be able to hear audio files (CDs and people singing) you can also play them on the DKC850. Also called Pianosoft plus audio. You can even get floppies that play the piano while playing the audio files on the CD called PianoSmaft. So you get all these new features, just not the Disklavier radio. Crappy! You con’t even need to know anything about pin assignments because you use standard MIDI cables to connect the boxes - MIDI In to MIDI out. Carol On Oct 9, 2014, at 5:57 PM, 'Jon Arnold' <mailto:jonarnold@...> jonarnold@... [disklavier] < <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: Carol, I hear what you are saying and agree to an extent, but in my case where I want to upgrade my 100R to an 850 and Yamaha cannot even provide PINOUT information so that a cable can be made (purchasing one from Yamaha is apparently not an option, according to Yamaha customer service), so what other options are left? From: <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com [ <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2014 10:30 PM To: <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet. Carol Beigel Sent from my iPhone On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, <mailto:mqphan@...> mqphan@... [disklavier] < <mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote: Hi everyone: I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step. I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments. Minh
2014-11-14 by Joseph F. Bert (Joe@FinancialGroup.com)
I just upgraded to the 850 and just realized I no longer have a floppy drive to play the Smart Piano Soft floppies with the CD player. What's one to do? Thanx! Sent from my iPad On Oct 29, 2014, at 8:33 AM, PianoBench@aol.com<mailto:PianoBench@aol.com> [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com<mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>> wrote: Good morning, everyone. Jon, I recommend that you contact Steve Winder (swinder617@aol.com<mailto:swinder617@aol.com>), an expert piano and Disklavier technician who can serve your area. He gave me permission to post his email here. Regards, PianoBench On Oct 28, 2014, at 7:36 AM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@earthlink.net<mailto:jonarnold@earthlink.net> [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com<mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>> wrote: Thanks Carol. The statement about “very late model Mark II but not quite XG” is pretty much a direct quote from Yahama Disklavier tech support via phone. I have no idea whether it really exists or not, that is just what was said to me by Yamaha and I took it at face value. This information is helpful, thank you, as my Yamaha dealer has been far less than helpful, or even seemingly interested in resolving this problem. Knowing that the 850 cannot be used as a direct replacement for the 100R definitely helps since I can eliminate that from any consideration list. But what my Yamaha dealer DID say, and I would like to confirm here if possible, is that the 850 is far better than my 100R in terms of music playback, and especially in terms of the MIDI stuff (ie, other instruments like drums, bass, violins, etc) than my 100R with the MU50, so my best bet would be to use *BOTH* the 100R and the 850, plugging the 850 into the input port on the 100R, and disconnecting the MU50. That would *SEEM* to make sense, especially given what you said below, but is that viable? The other problem is that there does not seem to be Yamaha competence within 200 miles of here (near Cocoa Beach, FL) that could or would do a service call?? The final problem, where I pretty much gave up and am considering just selling the whole piano, is that when the local dealer sent a non-disklavier-savvy tech out who tried to connect it as above – it worked and sounded absolutely beautiful for about a minute or two, then the 100R display showed: Piano Power Off! (01:55) (PWM OVER) _ ESBL And it stops. That indicates what? A problem in the 100R to be sure, but what and how to resolve it, especially with no disklavier tech in this part of the universe? Thanks Jon
From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com<mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2014 12:24 AM To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com<mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> Cc: Carol Beigel Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? To my knowledge there is no such thing as a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”. The MkIIXG was the first to have updatable flash memory. Yamaha did this on purpose, requiring a DKV850 to be an add-on box and not a replacement for the MarkII. Even if you could make this cable it would not work because the operating systems are different. Learn to work with your MIDI in and outputs on the Disklavier you have. This means using conversion software to convert your current Yamaha ESEQ files to standard MIDI files. You can put many MIDI files on your computer and use playlist software to play them through your Disklavier. Just remember that your Disklavier can only see 99 of anything, such as 99 folders with 99 files. Have you read the Handbook of MIDI Player Tools 2003 version? You can find both versions at www.midiplayertools.com<http://www.midiplayertools.com/>. It was written with early Disklaviers in mind. The guru of Disklavier technical support is Bill Brandon (on this list) and the guru of all things MIDI is George Litterst (also on this list and who wrote the fancy MIDI book when the MarkII came out!). On Oct 10, 2014, at 4:29 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@earthlink.net<mailto:jonarnold@earthlink.net> [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com<mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>> wrote: Carol, My Yamaha dealer told me that my grand piano is a “very late model Mark II but not quite XG”, and that I SHOULD be able to *replace* the 100R with the 850. That would be my goal, since the 100R with floppies is quite old and the disk drive has gone out twice already, and even in conjunction with the Yamaha MU50 for the MIDI stuff, he tells me that 850 is far superior to the 100R/MU50 combo. The only problem I have is finding a cable that can convert the 9 pin from the piano to the 15 pin for the 850. The cable that comes in the conversion kit is virtually and literally unavailable anywhere, and apparently the computer 9-15 pin converter cable does not have the right pinouts, nor can Yamaha tell me what the pinouts should be?? From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com<mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2014 6:32 PM To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com<mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? I believe the 100R belongs to a MarkII Disklavier and requires the DKC850 to be an add-on thru MIDI cables to the existing control box. You cannot replace that box or get Disklavier radio. However, you can still buy Yamaha pianosoft discs = even on eBay if they still work. You would need the Yamaha floppy drive connected to one of the two USB ports on the DKC850 and put the Yamaha music into memory on the DKC850. Then put both the floppy drive and disks away somewhere. You can put 99 folders with 99 standard MIDI files (songs) in each on a USB thumb drive land play them using the DKC850.I believe that if you have speakers to be able to hear audio files (CDs and people singing) you can also play them on the DKC850. Also called Pianosoft plus audio. You can even get floppies that play the piano while playing the audio files on the CD called PianoSmaft. So you get all these new features, just not the Disklavier radio. Crappy! You con’t even need to know anything about pin assignments because you use standard MIDI cables to connect the boxes - MIDI In to MIDI out. Carol On Oct 9, 2014, at 5:57 PM, 'Jon Arnold' jonarnold@earthlink.net<mailto:jonarnold@earthlink.net> [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com<mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>> wrote: Carol, I hear what you are saying and agree to an extent, but in my case where I want to upgrade my 100R to an 850 and Yamaha cannot even provide PINOUT information so that a cable can be made (purchasing one from Yamaha is apparently not an option, according to Yamaha customer service), so what other options are left? From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com<mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2014 10:30 PM To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com<mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com> Subject: Re: [disklavier] Is it possible to copy disklavier music from floppy disks with a generic floppy drive? I am always amazed by the unwillingness to use accessories made specifically for a product. In the case of the Disklavier it is also the pin assignments of the floppy drive. We are talking about $150 to be able to put proprietary music into your Disklavier. These are copy protected floppies that a computer cannot read without special software. Floppies also wear out over time so it might be better to just buy the music from Yamaha directly over the Internet. If you want non copyrighted music just download some of the thousands of free MIDI files available over the internet. Carol Beigel Sent from my iPhone On Oct 8, 2014, at 9:23 PM, mqphan@gmail.com<mailto:mqphan@gmail.com> [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com<mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com>> wrote: Hi everyone: I have a Disklavier E3. It does not have a floppy drive, but there are a lot of Disklavier music for sale on Ebay on floppies. Is it possible to purchase an inexpensive generic floppy drive (instead of the expensive one sold by Yamaha), connect it to my Mac, and copy the music files from the floppies onto my computer? I can then transfer these files onto the Disklavier E3 directly or via an USB memory stick as an intermediate step. I appreciate knowing if the above steps would work, and the quality of the music on those floppies that are for sale on Ebay such as the Mozart Classical Solo Piano Collection. Thank you in advance for your comments. Minh [cid:image1c391c.JPG@4bc62e9b.4f82b83c] Joseph Bert CFP®, AIF® Joe@FinancialGroup.com 1111 Douglas Avenue Altamonte Springs, FL 32714 (407) 869-9800 - (800) 393-9900 - Fax: (407) 869-9700 Website: www.FinancialGroup.com<http://www.FinancialGroup.com> P.S. The finest compliment we can receive is an introduction from a satisfied client. Click here to submit an introduction<http://www.financialgroup.com/tell>. 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