My husband purchased the Yamaha CLP-465GP for my birthday in 2012. I had previously owned Clavinova 810-S. I owned that for 17+ years and loved that being digital the notes never failed to sound any different from the day I bought it. On the CLP-465GP, I immediately noticed that the middle F & F# had a sort of "twangy" sound to it, as if it was out of tune. The dealer came out and cleaned the contacts, but the sound persisted. Then they replaced the keyboard, again, no change. It is heard with and without headphones. I called Yamaha and was told that it is not a defect but a "variation"...that it cannot be fixed, and if I cannot learn to live with it, then "this may not be the instrument for me". The rep explained that this is a sampling of those notes. I do not claim to have the understanding of so many on this board in regards to the electronics. But as a lay person, if a mold is warped or defective from the start then anything produced from that mold will only be a reproduction of that. It seems to me that these notes were "sampled" from an instrument out of tune. I see this as a defect. Can anyone enlighten me to the contrary?? I am self taught, play every day for at least 1 hour, mostly classical. Other than this sound, for my level and need I really love this piano. It has the look of a baby grand, the weighted keys feel real enough, and it has more than enough functions for my need. BUT, the problem notes are smack in the middle of the keyboard and therefore frequently played. It is in grand piano 1 voice, which is my favorite voice to play in and heard through all levels of brilliance. I could play in one of the 3 other grand piano voices, but that doesn't seem right to force the user to this end given the price tag of this piano.