My next piano??
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@George-K said in My next piano??:
Off to look at the Kawai CA49 and CA59 tomorrow.
I've heard that the CN301 has a spectacular action. I don't know if they have one in stock at the place I'm going to....
I thought the CA were their higher series?
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@LuFins-Dad the CA49 is a the bottom of their "Concert Artist" series. Retails for about $3K.
The CN301, similarly priced, has, according to one site, an action that rivals the Roland HO704.
https://azpianonews.blogspot.com/2019/02/kawai-ca48-review-digital-piano-low-price.html
Interestingly, I looked at the manual of my CE200, and it has...96 note polyphony. The sound was always fine for me, so there's that.
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@George-K said in My next piano??:
@LuFins-Dad the CA49 is a the bottom of their "Concert Artist" series. Retails for about $3K.
The CN301, similarly priced, has, according to one site, an action that rivals the Roland HO704.
https://azpianonews.blogspot.com/2019/02/kawai-ca48-review-digital-piano-low-price.html
Interestingly, I looked at the manual of my CE200, and it has...96 note polyphony. The sound was always fine for me, so there's that.
Eyeroll at AZ Piano Guy.
It’s a dealer that masquerades as an independent 3rd party.
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@LuFins-Dad I know. I commented about him earlier, and you said that it didn't sound "scammy" but just some guy trying to sell pianos.
Someone said, "The piano you like the most is the piano you played last."
I'm playing the Kawais first.
That said, my CE200 served me well for a while, until I got aggressive with it in the last 2 years. It just wore out. I had no problem with the touch and feel, and, as you know, sound was irrelevant.
I want something that will last me into my (deeper) dotage.
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I may be completely wrong about the Kawai line these days, but going back in the day, the CN series were modeled to compete with the CLP -25, -35, and slightly with the -45 models. The CA series were generally meant to compete with CLP-45, CLP-75, and the CLP-85 models. I guess there could be a little crossover at the top of the CN series with the bottom of the CA…
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Played the Kawais today. Spent about 30 minutes at the CA49. Though the sound was not the greatest (even with headphones) I really liked the way it played. The keys have a bit of texture which makes playing nice. The action was a bit light, but that's "adjustable."
I also played the CN301 - similarly priced. It felt a bit better, and it sounded a bit better.
No decision made - gonna look at Rolands and Yammies next week.
This store has a "digital tech guy." The sales lady suggested I get in touch with him and see if my CE200 is worth repairing. My gut says "no." Even if fixed, it's STILL a 15 year old digital and prone to all kinds of problems.
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Naw, I vote for get a new one, don't put money into the 15 year old. 15 years ago you were working, so obviously your old digital will be subconsciously linked to what you were like as I remember you from 15 years ago: depression, anger, exhaustion, violence, frustration, being a left winger and everything else that creates unexplainable wrong notes, and incomprehensible expression. Just life from 15 years ago. You just can't shake that out of an old digital.
Now, a NEW digital? Well-well, it will clearly reflect how wonderful a person you are now, happy, content, constantly smiling and giggling, retired on donuts. It will have no choice but to make you think you're playing beautifully!
(btw Axt, the above is totally serious, just so you know)
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@George-K said in My next piano??:
Played the Kawais today. Spent about 30 minutes at the CA49. Though the sound was not the greatest (even with headphones) I really liked the way it played. The keys have a bit of texture which makes playing nice. The action was a bit light, but that's "adjustable."
I also played the CN301 - similarly priced. It felt a bit better, and it sounded a bit better.
No decision made - gonna look at Rolands and Yammies next week.
This store has a "digital tech guy." The sales lady suggested I get in touch with him and see if my CE200 is worth repairing. My gut says "no." Even if fixed, it's STILL a 15 year old digital and prone to all kinds of problems.
15 years is not “that” old to me. At least not at the quality level these particular models are supposed to be. Frankly, I don’t expect to see the issues you are experiencing until you get to about 20 years. And even then it’s the exception. 25 years is about the time that we start seeing most issues on the Clavs and Rolands. But your Kawai is a stage piano right? Never mind… Stage pianos are going to be a little more finicky and problematic… The frame under the keyboards are thinner and lighter for the sake of portability but at the cost of longevity. Structural integrity is the number one technical concern with digitals….
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@LuFins-Dad said in My next piano??:
But your Kawai is a stage piano right?
I don't know what a "stage piano" is.
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@George-K said in My next piano??:
@LuFins-Dad said in My next piano??:
But your Kawai is a stage piano right?
I don't know what a "stage piano" is.
My apologies. I thought the CE was a stage piano similar to Roland RD and Yamaha CP and P series.
Still, it wasn’t built to the standards of the CN series. Your post has inspired me to find and try a CN301…
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@LuFins-Dad said in My next piano??:
Your post has inspired me to find and try a CN301…
I liked it. But, I have to compare. Also, I spent a fair amount of time today. When I looked at the CLPs near me, and @kluurs Roland, I barely touched them.
Also, just looking around, I see the CA49s at Amazon a lot cheaper than "reputable" places like GuitarCenter and Kraft.
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I hate Amazon, you should too.
From your linked page:
Question:Did anyone receive the Chopin walzer (1-19) lesson book with their piano? The description says it is included.
Answer:No, I did not received the Chopin walzer (1-19) lesson book with my piano.
By Zulamit on January 9, 2023Question:If this arrives damaged, will a refund and return shipping ctedit be issued?
Answer:No, my piano came with damages and they discounted a little money because the did not wated me to return it.
By Zulamit on January 9, 2023No Chopin Walzer book? How the hell can anyone use this keyboard if there's no sheet music with it? It's useless. It's a paperweight.
And. . . I'm finding a growing number of people claiming damage to the product they purchased, knowing full-well that given shipping costs, they will likely be offered a credit on their card for all their pain and suffering. Or, "just take it back and give me a full refund, or I'll issue a chargeback."
Thanks Amazon. -
Looking around, I wonder if a "stage piano" would suit my needs.
The piano is in a spare bedroom, so I don't need pretty furniture.
However, I don't need/want a ton of bells and whistles which all of these seem to offer.
The Kawai ES920 gets good reviews, and combined with their "furniture stand" and "pedal bar" it looks totally functional. Add Pianoteq and perhaps some better speakers, and it might work.
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@George-K said in My next piano??:
Looking around, I wonder if a "stage piano" would suit my needs.
The piano is in a spare bedroom, so I don't need pretty furniture.
However, I don't need/want a ton of bells and whistles which all of these seem to offer.
The Kawai ES920 gets good reviews, and combined with their "furniture stand" and "pedal bar" it looks totally functional. Add Pianoteq and perhaps some better speakers, and it might work.
I would like something like that too.
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Personally? I can’t stand stage pianos. The stand construction is so week that they will typically start to become unstable in weeks. The pedal moves around unless you buy the stand with the built in pedals. Those are typically flimsy things that won’t allow incremental pedaling and break down over a short period of time. In order to be lightweight enough to be “stage pianos” many are built with thinner and lighter key frames that can and will warp if you play dynamically. Stage pianos are built for people that want to play keyboard pads but pretend they are playing a piano.
Just like anything, you get what you pay for…
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@LuFins-Dad said in My next piano??:
Personally? I can’t stand stage pianos. The stand construction is so week that they will typically start to become unstable in weeks. The pedal moves around unless you buy the stand with the built in pedals. Those are typically flimsy things that won’t allow incremental pedaling and break down over a short period of time. In order to be lightweight enough to be “stage pianos” many are built with thinner and lighter key frames that can and will warp if you play dynamically.
@jon-nyc said
My first was a stage model and it was unstable on the stand.
Well, that settles that, LOL.
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