Korg Krome EX is discontinued.
Posted: Thu Nov 17, 2022 8:24 am
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Looking at the previous ways they have brought out lower end boards with Kronos sound engines (Grandstage, Vox Continental), I would guess that any Kronos-derived board below Nautilus would lose the rewritable SSD aspect (i.e. the ability to add new sample libraries, or at least streaming ones, and also eliminate existing pre-installed expansion libraries). They could reduce keyboard-playable parts to 8 instead of 16 (matching MODX+, and Fantom-0 when its seamless sound switching is enabled). Reduced number of effects. Maybe scaled-down rear-panel connectivity, external power supply. So yeah, I can see a "lower end Nautilus" as one possible way to go.Stargazer wrote:It literally says, "out of production".
Yay! It's getting hot. I can hardly wait what will Korg bring out. Probably in a short time, for the Christmas sale.
I dream of the Nautilus ROM section with full sequencer and half of the sample RAM or Flash capabilities or even quarter would do, 512MB for say, 1200 USD/EUR. Even with sampling as an option (like for Trion Le/TR) for some 129 USD/EUR option. That would be just perfect.
One major thing where Krome successor needs resolute improvement is the insert effect section. Yamaha introduced 5 insert effects in 1989 with their SY77 workstations, Korg still sells (albeit middle class workstation) with the same spec in 2022. It was by far the weakest workstation in the class when it comes to this single parameter.Scott wrote:Looking at the previous ways they have brought out lower end boards with Kronos sound engines (Grandstage, Vox Continental), I would guess that any Kronos-derived board below Nautilus would lose the rewritable SSD aspect (i.e. the ability to add new sample libraries, or at least streaming ones, and also eliminate existing pre-installed expansion libraries). They could reduce keyboard-playable parts to 8 instead of 16 (matching MODX+, and Fantom-0 when its seamless sound switching is enabled). Reduced number of effects. Maybe scaled-down rear-panel connectivity, external power supply. So yeah, I can see a "lower end Nautilus" as one possible way to go.
I hope any follow on to Krome (or Nautilus LE), if it omits the SSD, would not use an internal SD card to store the built-in PCM samples. Those were prone to corruption in the Krome.Scott wrote:I would guess that any Kronos-derived board below Nautilus would lose the rewritable SSD aspect (i.e. the ability to add new sample libraries, or at least streaming ones, and also eliminate existing pre-installed expansion libraries).
I wonder how they stored the large sample sets in the Grandstage and Vox Continental.bpoodoo wrote:I hope any follow on to Krome (or Nautilus LE), if it omits the SSD, would not use an internal SD card to store the built-in PCM samples. Those were prone to corruption in the Krome.
Good question. Given the 10-20 Gbytes in the sample sets, respectively, it is unlikely to be flash ROM chips which would be very expensive. It is also unlikely to be SD card due to the relatively slow read rate (10Mb/s) for the class 10 SD cards from a few years ago.Scott wrote:I wonder how they stored the large sample sets in the Grandstage and Vox Continental.bpoodoo wrote:I hope any follow on to Krome (or Nautilus LE), if it omits the SSD, would not use an internal SD card to store the built-in PCM samples. Those were prone to corruption in the Krome.
Interesting questions indeed. I would be surprised if it was SSD, as that would increase the implementation complexity significantly by requiring a SATA controller. Like the Krome, I wouldn't be surprised it it is in fact SD card with a custom controller or buffering in RAM. Korg seem to have moved a lot of their models to using Raspberry Pi Zeros as well, so I suppose one of those with samples either on an SD card or a USB to SATA adaptor are all possible.bpoodoo wrote:Good question. Given the 10-20 Gbytes in the sample sets, respectively, it is unlikely to be flash ROM chips which would be very expensive. It is also unlikely to be SD card due to the relatively slow read rate (10Mb/s) for the class 10 SD cards from a few years ago.Scott wrote:I wonder how they stored the large sample sets in the Grandstage and Vox Continental.bpoodoo wrote:I hope any follow on to Krome (or Nautilus LE), if it omits the SSD, would not use an internal SD card to store the built-in PCM samples. Those were prone to corruption in the Krome.
The most likely answer is SSD, especially if Korg reused the core architecture of Kronos for Grandstage and Vox Continental. Low level I/O can be very device-specific, and it would make sense to leverage the Kronos I/O implementation. But the definitive answer whether it is indeed an SSD drive would come from a service manual, a Korg technician, or a savvy owner - and I am none of the above.
Yeah, there's something going on with this site. The dates are all messed up on the latest posts. Hopefully Sharp corrects whats going on.StephenKay wrote:Did you have any issues making that last reply? I keep getting errors trying to post a new topic.