Kronos LS keyboard problem - sinking keys - design problem?
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Has this happened on newer Kronos keyboards? Mine is the 61 key titanium edition.
Both my M3 exp and Karma keyboards have had no keyed issues and I’ve had them for years and years.
Should I be concerned?
Mike
Both my M3 exp and Karma keyboards have had no keyed issues and I’ve had them for years and years.
Should I be concerned?
Mike
Korg Karma
Korg M3 Expanded
Korg Kronos Titanium
Yamaha Tyros 5
Arturia MicroFreak
M-Audio Oxygen 61
Akai Force
Roland MC-707
1010music Black Box
Zoom Arq 48
Korg M3 Expanded
Korg Kronos Titanium
Yamaha Tyros 5
Arturia MicroFreak
M-Audio Oxygen 61
Akai Force
Roland MC-707
1010music Black Box
Zoom Arq 48
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- Junior Member
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- Joined: Wed Mar 19, 2014 11:50 am
Indeed! I owned a 2 88 for three years with no issues – either with the RH3 action, which is extremely high quality, or with crashing / boot up / etc. I now own a Titanium 61, which also has a great semi-weighted keybed – very playable, even for piano.GrandMasterKorg wrote:I would recommend to buy a Korg Kronos 88 with RH3 action. This is the best and sturdy keybed you can get!
I have a Korg Kronos X 88 from the year 2015 and never had any problem with the keybed.
It's huge and it's sturdy!!
Some have reported issues with the LS and "sinking keys." Having played it in a local music store, I found it to be lacking in resistance and spring back. I would not buy an LS for that reason; plus no AT. YMMV
Current: Kronos 61 Titanium, Yamaha Montage 6, Roland Fantom, Dexibell Vivo S7 Pro, MPC Live II; Previous: Kronos 73 SE and 2 88, Yamaha Motif 6, XF, EX5, SY77, DX7 (x2), CP33, Roland JP-50, Alesis QS8
Late to the party here... I started Googling when my 3 yr old LS started developing the same problem & lo & behold I found this thread. I'm not handy enough to fix it on my own. I'm hoping to wait until there's a hole in my schedule before taking it in for repair since my repair shop is a few hours away & I know they'll need to keep it a while. My question is, for anyone who has had the sinking keys problem, are these keys on the verge of breaking? My LS is a single keyboard live rig, so I'm worried it may be a ticking time bomb if I keep gigging with it as is. Thoughts?


Hi rmdrent.rmdrent wrote:Email address for this guy please.DCMUSIC3 wrote:I have contacted John McCubbery, Vice President, Worldwide Marketing at KORG and brought the problem to his attention.
Hopefully we will get some answers soon.
I will follow up as well.
Unfortunately I don't have his email address.
The Australian distributors are getting me a NEW KEYBED.
My advice would be to contact your local retailer who should then contact the local distributor.
Apparently Korg are aware of the problem.
Good luck, mate.
cheers,
DC.
Here's a video of my repair of a faulty key.
https://youtu.be/gX4EyCk3ZVc
A few weeks after making this video I received a new keybed.
More details to come.
https://youtu.be/gX4EyCk3ZVc
A few weeks after making this video I received a new keybed.
More details to come.
My advice would be to contact the dealer that sold you the unit. They should notify the local distributor to organise a new keybed for you.mcgoo wrote:If Korg is covering that, I'd sure to know before I plop down $200 for the 4 keys on my LS that need to be replaced.DCMUSIC3 wrote: A few weeks after making this video I received a new keybed.
More details to come.
The design of the key springs has been modified.
Good luck, mate.
The new keybed.
<a href="https://www.imagevenue.com/ME13GF2M" target="_blank"><img src="https://cdn-thumbs.imagevenue.com/15/57 ... GF2M_t.jpg" alt="new Kronos keybed EDIT 2.jpg"></a>
The old key spring.
<a href="https://www.imagevenue.com/ME13GF2O" target="_blank"><img src="https://cdn-thumbs.imagevenue.com/f5/79 ... GF2O_t.jpg" alt="Spring original text.jpg"></a>
The redesigned spring.
<a href="https://www.imagevenue.com/ME13GF2P" target="_blank"><img src="https://cdn-thumbs.imagevenue.com/0b/5a ... GF2P_t.jpg" alt="Spring new design text.jpg"></a>
The sharp edge of the spring has been smoothed out.
Let's hope this new design fixes the issue.
<a href="https://www.imagevenue.com/ME13GF2M" target="_blank"><img src="https://cdn-thumbs.imagevenue.com/15/57 ... GF2M_t.jpg" alt="new Kronos keybed EDIT 2.jpg"></a>
The old key spring.
<a href="https://www.imagevenue.com/ME13GF2O" target="_blank"><img src="https://cdn-thumbs.imagevenue.com/f5/79 ... GF2O_t.jpg" alt="Spring original text.jpg"></a>
The redesigned spring.
<a href="https://www.imagevenue.com/ME13GF2P" target="_blank"><img src="https://cdn-thumbs.imagevenue.com/0b/5a ... GF2P_t.jpg" alt="Spring new design text.jpg"></a>
The sharp edge of the spring has been smoothed out.
Let's hope this new design fixes the issue.
- geoelectro
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This is a similar spring used in the older "Hammer Action" by Yamaha prior to 1998. One end of the spring pushes against the key frame while the other end pushes against the key. The motion of the key causes friction where the spring meets the key and begins to wear the plastic of the key. As it wears, the total gap the spring sits in expands causing the spring to lose tension. In this case, it took years for this wear to become evident.
Repairs required replacing the key (which are no longer available)
The replacement keybed called the Graded Hammer Effect has been a great replacement with a much better feel and no key/spring wear.
A good action design would depend more on gravity than springs. The key weights are usually down. Pressing the key raises the weight and gravity pulls it back down. A spring can be used to make this action a little more snappy but without the high tensions that cause wear.
Geo
Repairs required replacing the key (which are no longer available)
The replacement keybed called the Graded Hammer Effect has been a great replacement with a much better feel and no key/spring wear.
A good action design would depend more on gravity than springs. The key weights are usually down. Pressing the key raises the weight and gravity pulls it back down. A spring can be used to make this action a little more snappy but without the high tensions that cause wear.
Geo
Kronos 61 : 3GB RAM 120GB 2nd Drv.
Kronos 2 61
Synthesizers.com Custom Modular
N.I. Komplete 11, Omnisphere 2, VB-3.
HP i7 8GB Win 10
Yamaha P-80 Weighted Keyboard. NanoPad2
Kronos 2 61
Synthesizers.com Custom Modular
N.I. Komplete 11, Omnisphere 2, VB-3.
HP i7 8GB Win 10
Yamaha P-80 Weighted Keyboard. NanoPad2