Hi everyone.
This is my first post, but I've read a lot of them over the years. A few years ago I was going to buy the Yamaha CLP340. But I got laid off, then I had to replace a car that died, then had a kid... I'm now kind of in the position to replace our very bad acoustic piano with a digital one. The problem is, the 340 isn't made or sold any longer.
I've done some shopping around, and it seems the price of these pianos have gone up a bit. I can afford the Yamaha Arius 141 and maybe the 161 or 181, the 240 is out of my reach at this point. I know, a few years ago the 340 was in my grasp, but times have changed.
Our Story & Clark piano-organ needs replacing and our 9-yr old wants to start lessons. As you can tell, I'm shopping for a digital piano. I want him to have a relatively easy transition between the digital piano at home and real piano at lessons or grandparent's house, etc. I've narrowed my choices to two Casios, the PX850 ($1100) or the AP640 $(1400). I know, it seems many people on this forum aren't believers in the Casio line and like Roland, Yamaha, or Kawai better. However, because of my price range and criteria for realistic touch/feel/pedaling over realistic sound, I'm leaning towards the newer PX850. However, the AP640 has some features I don't understand because I'm not very electronically savvy (yet).
The AP640 has "general midi" and 16 track recording.
The PX850 has regular midi and 2 track recording.
I have no idea what midi will do for me, but the option of the multitrack recording sounds awesome. But, as I said, I'm leaning towards the PX850. I'm wondering if there's a way to "trick" the piano into doing more tracks. I guess I'm thinking I can record two tracks, then play them while I'm playing a 3rd track and record it all on the memory card or on a computer. Then play those 3 while I play a 4th, etc.
It's more labor intensive, but I don't know if I'd use the feature to offset the extra $300.
Thanks for your thoughts.