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SOURCE: I have a Roland HP 2e digital piano - Foot pedal problem
The ROLAND pianos USUALLY require that you use a normally closed sustain pedal.
MANY pedals are the opposite and close when pressed. SOMETIMES you can open the pedal and reverse the way the switch works.
SOURCE: I have a casio wk-200 piano. I bought headphones
The keyboard has a mic jack that is the same size as the headphones. You probably put the headphone plug into the wrong jack is all.
SOURCE: When I plug the pedal in and play, the music is
1.Make sure you are plugged in to DAMPER (not FC1 or FC2)
2. Check to see if the notes STOP sustaining when you PRESS the pedal. If that is the case, first try turning off the Roland with the pedal plugged in and restarting with the pedal pressed down.
3. Press the EDIT button and scroll to Damper Polarity. See if it's set to Standard or Reverse.
4. If problem persists after all that, try holding the pedal jack into the Roland at different angles and then try the same with where the cable connects to the pedal. At that point, you can either attempt to repair the pedal or get another one.
Hope this helps,
Stewart
SOURCE: Our Casio Celviano AP-620 won't
My AP-620 has a pedal problem too... it sticks and I keep hearing the music I play ring out after the pedal is relaesed
SOURCE: I Have a Casio Privia
Yep... Roland pedals are reversed, that is, normally closed contacts. Unlike some Yamaha keyboards, the Casio doesn't have an inversion function available. You have two choices to solve this: 1. Buy a pedal with the corect sense 2. Open the Roland pedal and MAYBE with a soldering iron you can move a wire to select a contact with the opposite sense.
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Is an old piano, and in my Country no have a proffessional to repair!
Hello, I have the same problem, did you find a solution ? Regards.
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