Hi Joe Camaioni!
I searched the whole service manual for the Korg Triton Pro, but I was not able to locate a battery in. I think that this model does not have one.
In case you need the service manual, you may find it at the link below.
Hope you may find this answer helpful!
Best regards,
Miguel L. Martins
Elektrotanya for electronics experts
That unit is almost 20 years old and there is no support for it.
SOURCE: trouble with hooking mpc4k and korg triton pro to mbox
you will want your triton midi-in to go to your mpc midi-outB
then your mpc midi-inA to go to your mbox
your mpc midi-outA to go to your mbox
that should get you good for midi cables....
on the mpc, everytime you want to record a track using instruments from your mpc you will need to set a new track. on the main screen you would go to a new track (where Tr:01-Track-01 is) and change S:DRUM1 to S:MIDI, then to the right of that where it says OFF, turn that to 1A-Device01 ... you will have to make a new track for each instrument you use to help when bouncing tracks to mbox. for instance 1A-Device01 is the 1st track on your triton, 2A-Device02 is your second track and so on. make sure you also make a new track each time for where Tr:01-Track-01 is also for each instrument.
for the mbox i might be a little rusty on this so im going to post a quote from another site....
"in Pro Tools, go to setup - midi - midi studio. this is where you tell pro tools where your midi devices are connected. next, go to setup - midi - midi beat clock. you want to 'enable midi beat clock' and select the devices that are going to be receiving midi beat clock. all devices that you setup under midi studio should be showing. next, set pro tools' tempo for the session if you haven't already. This setup is based on Pro Tools being the MASTER device and the other device(s) SLAVE(S). Make sure that on your hardware/midi interface that the midi output is going to the midi input on the slave devices. On the mpc, press mode, then pad 9 and go to the sync tab. Choose "slave" under "sync in" and the port, 1 or 2, that your mpc will receive midi input. That's it!! When you start Pro Tools' sequencer, the mpc should start too at the same bar/beat location. I've tried slaving Pro Tools to the MPC1000 and Fantom Xa on diff. occasions but I could never get them in sync with Pro Tools. Tried diff. framerates and settings, but still, no luck. So I prefer using Pro Tools as the MASTER sending midi beat clock. Another thing, make sure that whatever you're tracking into Pro Tools doesn't change tempo during the song. If so, you'll have to edit tempo events in the tempo ruler. Hope this helps!!"
let me know if you need any more help.
SOURCE: sticky keys on Korg extreme
I just changed the key on my Korg Triton Studio 61. It took some time, but it wasn't that hard. You'd better have a power screw driver. I had to take out at least 30 screws.
Do this at your own risk. Don't blame me if you mess up your keyboard. I'm telling you. If you're not that handy, don't try it. Pay attention to detail and be careful.
The Steps that I took
1) Turn your keyboard face down. Make sure you put it on something soft so that you don't scratch the face of your keyboard or damage your knobs or the pitchbender.
2) Remove all the screws on the bottom panel and remove the panel.
3) you have to take the entire keybed out. Lots of screws! I had to remove the "assignable - midi input/output board" to get it out. MAKE SURE THAT YOU DISCONNECT ANY CABLES THAT CONNECT THE KEYBED TO THE REST OF THE KEYBOARD. I had to disconnect the keybed at three different places. These connector cables are NOT strong and if you pull too hard, you WILL break them.
3) Once you get the keybed out, you have to remove the plastic binder that goes at the back of the keybed. It holds the keys in place.
Then Snap the old key out. snap the new key in. Before you unpack your new key, make sure the old one is really broken. I had a key that wasn't broken. It had just come unsnapped. I snapped it back in and it was fine.
Put it all back together again.
I had a broken key before. i got it repaired and it cost me $150. This time I fixed it myself and it cost me $7.50
SOURCE: Broken Triton push button
I am not familiar with your exact model, but if the plastic "hinge" for the button has broken, it is possible to "fix" it. This is not a DIY repair though. Can you tell me where you are located so I can perhaps suggest a repair location?
Thanks,
Dan
SOURCE: My korg triton studio touchscreen is cracked.
You will have to go to Korg parts to get the exact replacement... these are not generic items.
Try this: Korg Parts (Parts is Parts): 1-800-590-0014
SOURCE: my Korg Triton Le has Lost all of its sound and i
Try this site:
http://www.tritonhaven.com/
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