Kurzweil PC3A6 [115/423] Upper volume adjust

Kurzweil PC3A6 [115/423] Upper volume adjust
6-60
Program Mode
KB3 Editor: The Tone Wheels (TONEWL) Page
Upper Volume Adjust
Since sample volumes can vary, while the volume of DSP-generated waveforms will remain
consistent, you may nd it necessary to adjust the level of the sample-based tone wheels. This
parameter lets you adjust the amplitude of the upper (sample-based) tone wheels relative to
amplitude of the waveform-generated tone wheels.
Number of Tone Wheels
This parameter lets you specify the number of tone wheels used by a KB3 program. The classic
tone wheel organs used 91 tone wheels, though the lowest 12 were for the pedals only. Therefore,
you may nd 79 a good number of tone wheels to specify for realistic organ emulations. This
would leave you 88 voices for other programs. You can specify up to 91 tone wheels. The number
of PC3A voices used by a KB3 program is (number of tone wheels + 1) / 2, rounded to the next
highest whole number if the result is a fraction. So, for example, with 79 tone wheels specied
you would use 40 voices. Keep in mind that these voices are permanently allocated and running
while the KB3 program is selected, and cannot be stolen. The additional voice used by KB3
programs is for keyclick.
Organ Map
The organ map controls the relative amplitude of each key, per drawbar. Like the wheel volume
maps, these maps are based on measurements we’ve made on actual organs. Equal uses the same
volume for each key and drawbar, and is not based on a real B3. Peck’s is a good normal map,
from a B3 in good condition. Eric’s is a bit more idealized; it’s smoothed out, but less realistic.
Bob’s is more uneven, based on an old B3.
Wheel Volume Map
The wheel volume map determines the volume level for each tone wheel. We’ve provided
several tone wheel volume maps here, based on measurements we’ve taken on dierent organs.
Equal is a map with all tone wheels at the same volume. It’s not based on a real B3. Bright is a
good normal map, based on a B3 in good condition. Junky is based on a B3 with an uneven,
rolled-o response. Mellow is somewhere between Bright and Junky.
You can also apply EQ to control wheel volumes based on the frequencies of each tone wheel. See
KB3 Editor: The EQ Page on page 6-69.
Globals
This is another toggle, which aects LFO2, ASR2, FUNs 2 and 4. When o, these three control
sources are local; they aect each individual note in the layers that use them as a control source.
They begin operating each time a note in that layer is triggered.
When the Globals parameter is set to On, these control sources become global, that is they aect
every note in every layer of the current program, not just the one to which they’re applied. When
these control sources are global, they begin operating as soon as the program is selected. When
Globals are on, LFO2, ASR2, and FUNs 2 and 4 will appear on their respective pages preceded by
the letter G to indicate that they’re global. You’ll use global control sources when you want to
aect each note in a given layer uniformly, and local control sources when you want to aect each
layer’s note independently.
Lower Transpose / Upper Transpose
These two parameters let you transpose the upper and/or lower tone wheels in semitone steps
away from their default tunings.

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