Does anyone know what to look for in a digital piano. It's not for any type of performances. Just for practice at home. Something that's a decent quality and is as wide as a traditional piano. Don't want any of those crappy keyboards that are just meant for messing around.
id really consider the kawai upright digi's, super nice and they have probably the closest thing you'll get to a real acoustin action (wooden, graded hammer). they're sampling i believe comes off their EXlots of nice models to choose from , the CA series seems to be the sweet spot between the best of what they offer for general home use and value (i.e. not paying extra for features you're not likely to use a lot)https://www.kawaius.com/main_links/digital/CA_2010/ca63.html
I would help to know more about your needs.You said "Something that's a decent quality and is as wide as a traditional piano."That describes nearly all digital pianos.You went on to say "Don't want any of those crappy keyboards that are just meant for messing around."If I interpret that correctly, then you're eliminating the $200 cheapo keyboards sold at Walmart, etc.This still leaves the field WAY open.So ... what to look for.1. Form: Do you want a keyboard or a console. From the above I'll assume console.2. Key action: The keyboard (action) feel varies considerably. Cheap pianos have cheap keyboards. I could not tolerate the keyboard on the sub-$1000 units. But, you'll have to try them out for yourself.3. Sound: The sound from digital pianos ranges from mediocre (for the expensive units, $4000 - $15000) to rat-terrible on the cheap ones. None of them truly sound like a piano. But you'll have to judge for yourself. There is a solution for the sound problem: Connect the piano (any piano) to a PC/Mac via MIDI or USB cable, and run piano library software on the computer. The computer-based pianos produce sound that is MUCH better than any digital piano at any price. Feed that to an external sound system and you're all set.With this solution you need only focus attention on criterion #2: keyboard feel.
2. Key action: The keyboard (action) feel varies considerably. Cheap pianos have cheap keyboards. I could not tolerate the keyboard on the sub-$1000 units. But, you'll have to try them out for yourself.3. Sound: The sound from digital pianos ranges from mediocre (for the expensive units, $4000 - $15000) to rat-terrible on the cheap ones. None of them truly sound like a piano. But you'll have to judge for yourself. There is a solution for the sound problem: Connect the piano (any piano) to a PC/Mac via MIDI or USB cable, and run piano library software on the computer. The computer-based pianos produce sound that is MUCH better than any digital piano at any price. Feed that to an external sound system and you're all set.With this solution you need only focus attention on criterion #2: keyboard feel.