HOW do I restore all the default sounds?
I bought a used TRITON and the seller said it is missing many sounds and they can be restored from the website but I dont see how. I dont know how he deleted half of the sounds.
Some of the sounds are duplicated several times also, so its some kind of error.
(BTW, wow TRITON classic cant save SAMPLES into the program!
I couldnt believe it, I have like 10 sounds I sampled and have to reload them into place everytime I turn it on. Funny, are the newer TRITONS capable of this?)
thanks
Danny
how do we get back deleted OEM sounds?
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- Gargamel314
- Platinum Member
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- Joined: Tue Dec 25, 2007 6:56 am
- Location: Carneys Point, NJ
I think you can load all the factory presets right from global mode, they should be stored in ROM, along with the demo sequences. Go to Global Mode, and then look for the option under the drop-down menu.
I don't know of any keyboards that do save their samples in RAM after you turn the power off. Yeah, it's a huge pain, but even the new M3 and OASYS workstations have to load sample data each time. It's called volatile RAM, and when the power gets cut, everything gets erased. On the newer workstations, you load them off of USB drives, compact flash, or some other kind of media that is much faster than the 3.5" floppy disks, so it's not as much as a pain as it is on the Triton. But you can get a SCSI option on the Triton Classic to use a hard disk which loads much faster than floppies.
I don't know of any keyboards that do save their samples in RAM after you turn the power off. Yeah, it's a huge pain, but even the new M3 and OASYS workstations have to load sample data each time. It's called volatile RAM, and when the power gets cut, everything gets erased. On the newer workstations, you load them off of USB drives, compact flash, or some other kind of media that is much faster than the 3.5" floppy disks, so it's not as much as a pain as it is on the Triton. But you can get a SCSI option on the Triton Classic to use a hard disk which loads much faster than floppies.
Korg Kronos-61, Nautilus-61, 01/Wfd, SONAR Pro
The Triton Classic doesn't have the stock patches stored in ROM so you need to download the floppies from their website and reload.
-Mc
-Mc
Current Korg Gear: KRONOS 88 (4GB), M50-73 (PS mod), RADIAS-73, Electribe MX, Triton Pro (MOSS, SCSI, CF, 64MB RAM), SQ-64, DVP-1, MEX-8000, MR-1, KAOSSilator, nanoKey, nanoKontrol, 3x nanoPad 2, 3x DS1H, 7x PS1, FC7 (yes Korg, NOT Yamaha).
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- Senior Member
- Posts: 440
- Joined: Tue Jun 13, 2006 6:44 am
- Location: Finland
Actually there is only one keyboard in the market that can save the external samples to the memory and that is the new Kurzweil PC3K. Of course some keyboards have internal hard drives and memory card slots where you can save the samples and have the keyboard load them automatically at start-up. But still it has to load them in some point. PC3K is different because the samples are saved so that they are in use immediately as you turn the keyboard on.Gargamel314 wrote:I think you can load all the factory presets right from global mode, they should be stored in ROM, along with the demo sequences. Go to Global Mode, and then look for the option under the drop-down menu.
I don't know of any keyboards that do save their samples in RAM after you turn the power off. Yeah, it's a huge pain, but even the new M3 and OASYS workstations have to load sample data each time. It's called volatile RAM, and when the power gets cut, everything gets erased. On the newer workstations, you load them off of USB drives, compact flash, or some other kind of media that is much faster than the 3.5" floppy disks, so it's not as much as a pain as it is on the Triton. But you can get a SCSI option on the Triton Classic to use a hard disk which loads much faster than floppies.
Korg Triton Classic 61-keys, Native Instruments Kore 2 (SW&HW)