Hello,
To cover the possibility of changing batteries or to add sounds, I would like to back up my entire Triton with Midi Quest 12.
Already, is this possible? And if yes, how ?
I'm having trouble finding tutorials for this (I'm French).
Thanks
Backing up my Triton
Moderators: Sharp, X-Trade, Pepperpotty, karmathanever
The Triton LE and Korg TR are both listed as being supported by MIDI Quest 12, so backing up should be possible, whichever instrument you have. Connect a MIDI interface between the computer running MIDI Quest, and the Triton/TR. The interface will need to carry SysEx messages to and from the instrument. Not all MIDI interfaces work well with SysEx, so it is necessary to check that communication between computer and instrument is good. SysEx receive by the computer is usually more reliable than SysEx transmit to the instrument. Something to do with the data buffering capability of the interface.
The MIDI Quest 12 online manual is here (in English).
https://www.soundquest.org/Help/MidiQuest12/index.html
Start with the "About Midi Quest" section, and go from there. If you have any questions, do come back here.
Goood luck.
.
The MIDI Quest 12 online manual is here (in English).
https://www.soundquest.org/Help/MidiQuest12/index.html
Start with the "About Midi Quest" section, and go from there. If you have any questions, do come back here.
Goood luck.
.
Use Google translate, of Bing translate. They are usually pretty good. (Utilisez Google Translate ou Bing Translate. Ils sont généralement plutôt bons.)
One way of testing the reliability of SysEx transfer to a computer would be to perform a complete data dump from the Triton, save it to a file, and repeat the process several times, saving each to a file with a different filename, then compare the contents of each of the files to that of the others. Suitable Windows software, for making the comparison, would be something like Beyond Compare, from Scooter Software:
https://www.scootersoftware.com
If each of the saved files is identical, that would suggest that the SysEx transfer to the computer is likely to be reliable.
Testing SysEx transfer reliability the other way, from computer to keyboard, is a bit less straightforward. If there are errors, the keyboard will probably report that the SysEx transfer has failed. If the transfer appears to have gone OK, than another full SysEx data dump from keyboard to computer could be performed, saved as a file, and compared to the original file, to make sure they are identical.
.
One way of testing the reliability of SysEx transfer to a computer would be to perform a complete data dump from the Triton, save it to a file, and repeat the process several times, saving each to a file with a different filename, then compare the contents of each of the files to that of the others. Suitable Windows software, for making the comparison, would be something like Beyond Compare, from Scooter Software:
https://www.scootersoftware.com
If each of the saved files is identical, that would suggest that the SysEx transfer to the computer is likely to be reliable.
Testing SysEx transfer reliability the other way, from computer to keyboard, is a bit less straightforward. If there are errors, the keyboard will probably report that the SysEx transfer has failed. If the transfer appears to have gone OK, than another full SysEx data dump from keyboard to computer could be performed, saved as a file, and compared to the original file, to make sure they are identical.
.