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Re: Sonuus G2M guitar to midi converter
> 1) Essentially, it tracks very well indeed. If anything it feels better
>than
> the Axon/G50.
Hm, you've got my attention!
> 2) You do have to play clean, they suggest palm muting at the bridge,
>which
> does work well. Don't
> expect miracles in terms of shredding
My shredding skills don't track well on a standard electric guitar, so
I'm good there.
.
> 3) Pitch Bend is fixed at 2 semitones. If you try a 2 semitone bend it
>often
> retriggers. Bends of one semitone are perfect. So no glissando for Rick.
Interesting... I remember I had to reprogram all my synth patches to
track +-24 (or was it 12?) on my G50 to get it to track correctly.
> A trill on a semitone doesn't retrigger the synth, but on a tone it
>does.
I'm not sure what that means...
> 4) No controls whatsover, just a 2 position gain switch(which worked ok
>for
> me), and a suggestion to
> use your guitar volume pot.
> 5)There's a thru output for the guitar signal, didn't test quality but
>will
> if anyone asks.
I'd be curious. Would be nice if there was a total hard bypass.
>
> 6) No warbling! At least, no warbling on sustained tones. I know exactly
> which note
> on my guitar gives the problems to all other devices, and the G2M plays
> that note with
> a long sustain till it shuts off. Of course, if you have more than
>one
> note ringing at once,
> by design or haphazardness, then it warbles away.
That's awesome. One of my biggest issues is the warbling that happens
as a note trails off.
> 7) I couldn't trick it into playing ultra low notes by playing just the
> right chord :-( 8) Range is exactly that of the guitar. Lowest note it
>will
> track is low drop D. Highest note is the 24th fret top E.
> Outside that range....nothing.
That's fine. Is there any synth that doesn't let you program it's
range/octave?
>
> 9) The power LED doubles as a guitar tuner. Pretty hopeless, the flashing
> speed decreases as you get nearer the note.
> It's ok for checking tuning, but as there's no info as to whether
>you're
> sharp or flat it's very difficult to use.
> For the cost of one extra LED it would have been workable.
>
> 10) Neat "battery dying" LED. Tells you in advance the battery will
>die, so
> you can replace it before gig or recording, (didn't test).
> 11) Not programmable in any way, fixed midi channel, velocity response,
> pitch bend rage, no transpose.
>
>
> Overall, I thought this was a pretty neat little device, I didn't check
>for
> sure against the Axon/G50 devices, but I reckon the
> latency is as low as with a hex p/u.
> If you wanna play rhythmically accurate, use the high notes and
>transpose if
> needed.
>
> Being mono is something of a disadvantage, as not only chords are ruled
>out,
> but also arpeggio type playing.
>
> Any questions....I have to pass it on to the owner soon.
>
Thanks a lot for this. The more I hear about this little device, the
more I think it'll be a fun addition to my rig.