Roland FR-5 Musical Instrument User Manual


 
11.9 Restore SET
V-Accordion
r
75
11.9 Restore SET
This function allows you to load
the settings of one of the pre-
programmed Sets into the cur-
rently selected Set memory.
Warning: This command over-
writes all settings of the current Set, i.e. the parameters
of the following sections: TREBLE EDIT, BASS EDIT, FREE
BASS EDIT, ORC BASS EDIT, ORCH. EDIT, ORC CHD EDIT,
ORC FBS EDIT and SET COMMON.
It may come in handy, though, if you want to return to
one of the factory Sets and use it as is, or as a starting
point for new edits.
(1) On the page shown above, press the [DATA÷ENTER]
button.
The display now changes to:
(2) Rotate the [DATA÷ENTER] knob to select the factory
Set you want to load.
(3) Press [MENU÷WRITE] to load the settings.
The display confirms this operation:
11.10 Treble Reg. on current Set
This is an environment in its
own right rather than a param-
eter. It allows you to set five
parameters for all Treble regis-
ters of the currently selected Set
simultaneously. This may help you save a lot of time,
especially for increasing or decreasing the volume of
some or all reeds, or for selecting a different noise type.
But be careful not to overuse this functionality.
Here’s how to take advantage of this environment:
(1) Select the Set whose Treble registers you want to
edit simultaneously.
(2) Select this parameter (“11.10 Treble Reg. on
current Set”).
See p. 38 for the two possible approaches (one via
the JUMP menu, the other using the registers).
(3) Turn the [DATA÷ENTER] knob to select the parame-
ter to be edited for all Treble registers.
The possibilities are:
Reed: Reed ALL, Reed 16’, Reed 8’, Reed 8'–, Reed 8'+,
Reed 4', Reed 5-1/3’, Reed 2-2/3’
Volume: Vol ALL, Vol 16’, Vol 8’, Vol 8'–, Vol 8'+,
Vol 4', Vol 5-1/3’, Vol 2-2/3’
Others: Noise, Noise Vol, Valve Vol, MusDetune
As you see, this step may involve two actions:
(a) You first need to decide which parameter type
you want to edit (“Reed”, “Vol”, “Noise”, “Noise Vol” or
“MusDetune”);
(b) Select the reeds your change should apply to (only
for “Reed” and “Vol”). Here’s an example: to set the
volume of all 5-1/3’ reeds (one per register) of the
current Set to “10”, turn the [DATA÷ENTER] knob until
“Vol 5-1/3’” is displayed, then proceed with the next
step.
Meaning of the warning that may appear—If you
select “Reed ALL” or “Vol ALL”, the following warning may
be displayed:
This only occurs if the “VALUE” next to it is currently “---”,
which means that the reeds of your Set use different set-
tings, which is very likely indeed. By proceeding with “ALL”,
you would assign them the same value – for all registers of
the current Set. Use the [UP]/[DOWN] buttons, or rotate the
[DATA÷ENTER] knob to select “YES” (set the same value for
all reeds) or “NO” (do not use the “ALL” setting), then press
the [DATA÷ENTER] knob.
Note: The “Vol” values you set here directly affect the volume
parameters of the respective edit modes. In other words:
selecting “5” here means that the corresponding reeds’ volume
is set to “5”.
(4) Press the [DATA÷ENTER] knob to select “VALUE”,
then rotate the [DATA÷ENTER] knob to select the
desired setting.
The possibilities depend on the choice you made in
step (3) above.
Note: Reeds that are currently off (see “2.2 Register” on p. 45)
adopt the new setting but are not switched on by this opera-
tion.
(5) Press [EXIT÷JUMP] to return to the Main page and
try out all 14 Treble registers.
Note: Do not change Sets at this stage, because that would
erase the changes you have just made.
(6) If you like your new settings, save them:
Parameter Setting range
Reed Bandoneon, I-Folk, I-Folk2, Classic, Cajun,
Jazz, F-Folk, D-Folk, Organetto, F-Folk2,
Classic2, Studio, Tradition, Steierische,
OldItaly, TexMex, Trikitixa
Vol Off, –40~Std~40
Noise
Bandoneon, I-Folk, I-Folk2, Classic, Cajun,
Jazz, F-Folk, D-Folk, Organetto, F-Folk2,
Classic2, Studio, Tradition, Steierische,
OldItaly, TexMex, Trikitixa
Noise Vol Off, –40~Std~40
Detune
Off, Dry, Classic, F-Folk, American_L,
American_H, North_Eur, German_L,
D-Folk_L, Italian_L, German_H, Alpine,
Italian_H, D-Folk_H, French, Scottish