![]() The only thing it can't do as a recorder is overdub. The ADCs are great quality with balanced XLR inputs and I've done a few mixes directly to the S6000 as well as archiving some vinyl from the 50s. Mine came fully loaded and I've ended up using it more as a digital stereo recorder than as a sampler. Fully expanded with 256gb ram and the second voice card for 128 voices, it's basically an orchestra in a box. I currently have a 100mb zip drive in addition to the 73gb internal drive which is another option for transferring files but a v6 scsi2sd should let you access the files via USB and is a better option these days, I just had the zip drive in my scrap pile. I really notice the quality when I do extreme downward transpositions. I think that came from those who just play back samples and don't do their own sampling. They sound great in spite of some peoples opinion on other forums. ![]() Floppy emulators are slow and the S6000 can record to hard disk so it's a much better option to use a hard disk. I put a 73gb SCSI drive in mine but I would consider scsi2sd if I do any more changes. They're a lot easier to use with a USB card but it isn't absolutely necessary. So what is the best way to play with this?ĭo i source a usb card for it and try to get akai sys running via virtual box (windows xp) on my mac laptop or do i get one of those usb floppy emulators off of amazon? ![]()
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