Oxy60, It was taken out of the box once and put back in. The person it was bought for never got a chance to play it! I can get it for you. I'm looking at getting a Yamaha P95, Casio PX-130, or Korg SP170 or SP250.
As a person who plays classical and pop music, of these you mention for action, the Korg SP250 would be the one that interested me most. I still move beyond that personally but that is the closest in your grouping that would interest me. Also if you look up reviews of the SP250 you will find that many people came to it or even the SP170 from the Yamaha P95. The reason most expressed is they did not like the action of the p95, not a complaint of the sound.
Just depends on the experience you want to gain. If you want to play and be able to play acoustics well along the way, then a digital keyboard with weighted graded hammers is important, IMO. If you want to be a master mixer of pop music for say, entertaining purposes or recording mixed voice music, then that's less important and you move more towards syths, arrangers, midi and the like.
Most 2011 and 2012 model digital stage pianos will have convincing grand piano as well as church organ sound in them, close enough to get going at least. So I boil it down to action personally. a lot of people are moving towards digital stage pianos for obvious reasons. I'm not a huge fan of digital though, they have their place for sure, especially for silent playing and or recording or for portability. I own a real grand piano, I don't need simulated grand piano sound from a glorified stereo system with keys on it.. Digital to me is an "also have tool" that one can use at three in the morning when others are asleep. But other people use them even professionally, so digital is real as well in that regard.
In your shoes, assuming you want piano action and basic piano sounds grand or otherwise, I would look at that Korg line. I'd seriously consider something mid range from Yamaha and Kawai though. I feel Kawai starting with their EP3 has organ and piano sound cornered and with good graded hammers. You have to move to a higher end Roland to get as good or better sound , IMO. Yamaha starting with the older model C33 and any of it's newer cousins is good. IMO for get the P series. The Korg SP 250 is not in the same class as any of these but yet gives a reasonable run for it's price class range.
This is all based off of my own research over the last 6 months or so. Don't consider it the definative answer to anything but a guide to launch your own search from !
David