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I need alternative to floppy disks - CF Reader?
Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2015 2:32 pm
by Volkov73
After days if searching the internet, I cannot find an answer.
What parts, and where can I buy them, in order to have something other than a floppy disk in my Classic Triton?
I most likely want CF Reader in place of the Floppy disk. I would be happy with an internal hard drive.
PLEASE can somebody guide me to complete this goal?
I want to use this instrument a lot but floppy disks are too faulty and small.
Happy to spend a bit of money on this mod.
Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2015 4:36 pm
by voip
How about this kind of thing?
www.ebay.co.uk/itm/231717463808
Or this:
www.ebay.co.uk/itm/381419454710
Neither are for CF cards, but would do the job.
.
Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2015 6:14 pm
by Falcon2e
I quit doing the floppy thing and went the SCSI route. Very fast loading, but as you probably know, you'll need to install the SCSI board/port, and get an external drive and cable. More stuff to haul to the gig.

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2015 11:46 pm
by xini
I have just upgraded my floppy drive to a CF reader.
It wasn't easy but it was worth it.
First we a found a SCSI board, it came used from Europe.
Then the CF card reader came specially made from Japan. The RaizinMonster board fits in place of the floppy drive. You can find these on ebay.
Because SCSI boards are designed for external hard drives & I wanted an internal connection to the RaizinMonster, I had to fit the SCSI board facing in the opposite direction. To facilitate that, I asked the Raizin Monster man to make the cables the appropriate length - which he kindly did.
There was challenge in the form of ribbon cables but after ordering another and a male/female adaptor, a fair bit of dismantling and re-assembling the cables, and some origami, plus some shielding with an anti static plastic bag, we got it all working.
Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2015 11:48 pm
by xini
NB - the first CF cards we bought were too fast for the Triton to handle. It couldn't read them. We had to source older (ie slower) CF cards and they were successful.
CF scsi
Posted: Thu Dec 31, 2015 11:50 pm
by leDan
Nice xini. I hope you enjoy your "new" Triton
Did Artmix actually make you a converter to allow for the scsi connector to be an internal one?
I was lucky enought to be one of the last ppl (?) to order one of the internal scsi kits from scsiforsamplers and is using a PCB-60 reader/writer with mine. The drawback with this unit is that the card protrudes some from the front of the unit (Artmix raizinmonster is better in this regard - i have one in my S5000 sampler right now).
Another good option is the scsi2sd unit. It is quite small and should probably manage with only terminator power to function externally (i.e build it into a small external casing and off you go):
https://www.itead.cc/scsi2sd.html
I have one of these inside a Yamaha EX5R and it works beautifully there.
Posted: Mon Jan 18, 2016 9:58 pm
by hartlas
Following this thread as I'm in the same position - wanting to use the sampling feature live more but getting pissed off with loading tons of floppies at each gig. I don't know much about the SCSI option - there are some on eBay for about £90 but then after buying it is it a) easy to fit and b) does it store samples or do I need something else to store them on?
Been out of the loop with new keyboards recently - if I liked the Triton but wanted to replace it with something that had better storage (SD card reader like the Roland FA range) and more user patches what would be a better model? Cheers!
Posted: Tue Jan 19, 2016 6:24 pm
by Falcon2e
I had one similar to this
http://www.ebay.com/itm/1GB-Ensoniq-ASR ... SwyQtVyq4O If you don't have a SCSI board/port installed, you'll need that too.
Posted: Tue Jan 19, 2016 9:38 pm
by Steinberger
For floppy replacement/upgrade go find Gotek SFR1M44-U100K USB Floppy Drive Emulator. It will format a USB thumb stick or single flash card reader/writer with 1,000 1.44mb floppy segments. There are several YouTube videos on different applications/results. I use one on my RM1x. It should be about $30.00 USD.
Posted: Tue Jan 19, 2016 10:12 pm
by Matty_Boy
Floppy drive emulators are just as slow as floppies. SCSI is much faster.
Posted: Thu Feb 04, 2016 10:16 pm
by hartlas
Matty_Boy wrote:Floppy drive emulators are just as slow as floppies. SCSI is much faster.
Imagine you are talking to someone that has no idea what a SCSI is or does. Please please could you explain what it is, how you use it and what is the advantage and of course where you get one and how its fitted?
Thanks!!
Re: CF scsi
Posted: Wed Feb 17, 2016 9:01 pm
by xini
leDan wrote:
Did Artmix actually make you a converter to allow for the scsi connector to be an internal one?
He sent us a 25pin D-SUB to 50pin conversion cable, which I believe he made. Obliging bloke.
Posted: Wed Feb 17, 2016 9:06 pm
by xini
hartlas wrote:Following this thread as I'm in the same position - wanting to use the sampling feature live more but getting pissed off with loading tons of floppies at each gig. I don't know much about the SCSI option - there are some on eBay for about £90 but then after buying it is it a) easy to fit and b) does it store samples or do I need something else to store them on?
Cheers!
The SCSI is very easy to fit. But it won't store samples. You'll still need another solution for storing and loading. The CF card reader was admittedly a faff but now it's done, it's done. It feels neat. I'm glad I don't have an external unit to attach every gig.
Now just to locate some good piano samples...
Posted: Wed Feb 17, 2016 9:23 pm
by xini
hartlas wrote:
Imagine you are talking to someone that has no idea what a SCSI is or does. Please please could you explain what it is, how you use it and what is the advantage and of course where you get one and how its fitted?
Thanks!!
SCSI function is outlined here
http://www.musiciansfriend.com/accessor ... face-board
It means you don't have to use floppy disks for storage, and it's SIGNIFICANTLY quicker to load data.
As for how to get one - ebay or general web scouring. You can only get them second hand.
To fit the unit, take off the shiny silver plate on the underside (being careful to cushion the topside of the instrument when you lay it upside down). Also remove the small back plate. It will only fit one way as you align the screw holes. Attach the ribbon connector to the socket nearby. Replace the cover on the underside. You should now have a socket in the back plate ready for your external media.
Please note I am in NO way a techie or an expert. I found out all this from reading old forums, and with a lot of help from a friend who also educated himself in the same way.
Posted: Sat Feb 20, 2016 8:17 am
by hartlas
Thanks for the reply. that makes sense I've found some SCSI boards on ebay. Once fitted I assume one would still need something to store the samples on? CD drive or something? Then this connects to the pins on the rear of the keyboard while saving and loading?
THanks in advance for your comments!
Stew