jbuonacc wrote:ahh, my problem is having my nose stuck in this ancient 2.50 manual that i got with it.
checked out the EOS4 manual again - while they totally overhauled and expanded the sequencer (i'd say it rivals the MPC and others in many regards), they totally botched the looping function. if i'm lucky it'll default to sequence start and end points and i can just switch it 'on' at power-up. i'll have to play around with it.
it's not possible to mute more than one track at a time is it? ie - having tracks 1-5 playing, then immedietely dropping out tracks 3 and 5 in real-time? as far as i can see you have to move the cursor to the track you want to mute and then change it.
Yes it is basicly like a MPC in a sense but better in some regards, Before the MPC2000 the MPC60/MPC3000 had no loop feature either. Also you can mute any tracks you want not just one at a time, even if that were the case you have a multimode midi mixer, you can get around almost anything is what i'm getting at.
yes, it seems like a great sequencer though. i may just have to make more use out of it than i'd originally planned...
about the HD - would a smaller capacity drive use less power, making it safer to use with an internal Zip? should i look into upgrading my power supply?
Just make things easier and get yourself a cheap scsi 3.5" drive and a external zip if need be, obviously the machine was not designed to have a zip in place of the floppy so there could be issues, I have a 4gb internal scsi and its more then enough. Also the emu hd kit is long gone, just a cable and mounting screws, no big deal! If you look inside you'll see the holes to mount the drive to the side of the case.
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