I have tried a few digital pianos from Yamaha, Kawai, Roland, Nord. Even if they have good mechanics (hammer action), they don't sound good when you start playing classical music on any of them. Even more, they feel horrible from a player's perspective. Those instruments are made for pop music, or recreational use at home. ![]() I have a Roland RD 700SX as midi controller keyboard, which has a good enough keyboard action, I use a Muse Receptor (computer and audio interface in one), Ivory American D (this sounds good, but it does not feel good while playing classical music), and Ravenscroft that is by far the most important item. I don't think the difference is small at all, in fact it's big if you want the real sensation and presence of a grand piano in your room. Anything else is a settlement, you have settled for this or that be it upright piano or digital or what ever if that is the case. In my case I own the grand piano already, I wanted a digital as well, mostly for the silent feature. ![]() I'm hooked on the digital for many different reasons than listed above regarding the acoustic grand piano. ![]() I play it 90% of the time and I love it, I can make really beautiful music through it but it is not a full size real grand piano. Nothing but a full size real grand piano is one.
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