ferocious_element wrote:cheers guys
so the general opinion is get the e4xt and if not get the e6400 yeh?
also just to check (for when i get one!) ijust take the out and put it in the input of my desk yeh?
also the hard drives that you can get for them, there for storing samples etc on yeh?
sorry to be a complete retard!
Tardness noted, but dismissed as irrelevant... we all had to start somewhere.
Yeah, general opinion being what it is, the E4XT has advantages over the E6400... you get the 128 voices off the bat, rather than 64 expandable to 128 (though the expansion may be difficult to come by); the 2nd MIDI/wordclock/AESEBU can be had as an upgrade for the E6400 (also includes a connector for an ASCII keyboard... the old DIN-5 ones; provides a good work around for the dreaded front panel button gremlins), but are standard on the E4XT, which saves you the trouble of looking for the expansion card. Oh, and if I remember, the E4XT came with a small SCSI hard drive installed, while it was an option for the E6400. The E-Synth could be thought of as an E4XT with a 16MB sample ROM already installed inside.
Other than that, the Ultra models have identical hardware inside (nearly identical... I think there's a socket or four missing from the E5000 mainboard)
Yes, the hard drives you can get are for storing samples, but E-mu arranges samples inside of banks... the banks also contain the presets that access the samples. I don't know how much you know already about the hard drive options... it's actually another topic in itself, but feel free to ask in this thread if you need clarification.
Yes, you can just take the main outs and connect it to inputs on your desk. It's what I've got (well, from the E6400 main outs to a stereo channel on a small Behringer mixer and from there into my sound card). The outputs on all of the Emulator 4 series are balanced TRS jacks (the very first model, the E-IV, also had balanced XLR main outs... but it's like a lobotomized hamster compared to the Ultra models in terms of processing power and memory for the operating system, severely limiting it... sorry, wandered off topic), but should work with unbalanced cables as well.