
By Askia Shaheed
Sat Apr 12, 2008 10:58 pm
Still waiting for the MPC 5000 and the Fantom G. But I am still curious as to why there is no mention of the Akai MPC 5000 in Japan.


Askia Shaheed wrote:Still waiting for the MPC 5000 and the Fantom G. But I am still curious as to why there is no mention of the Akai MPC 5000 in Japan.

emu1820 wrote:i wanted to know if its possible to downswitch the 960 ppqn resolution to ol' standard 96ppqn

Blue Haze wrote:Askia Shaheed wrote:Still waiting for the MPC 5000 and the Fantom G. But I am still curious as to why there is no mention of the Akai MPC 5000 in Japan.
Because they don`t have it and when they will get one they don`t know.

Askia Shaheed wrote:Now...I am not sure if I am calculating this correctly, but if you set quantize to 1/64(3), that should give you 96 ppqnyup.

Askia Shaheed wrote:Blue Haze wrote:Askia Shaheed wrote:Still waiting for the MPC 5000 and the Fantom G. But I am still curious as to why there is no mention of the Akai MPC 5000 in Japan.
Because they don`t have it and when they will get one they don`t know.
That is obvious...but the same is true for Akai in the US and UK. Yet they have the MPC 5000 advertisted unlike the Akai Japan website.
Anyway, I am mostly curious as to who is designing this product. The MPC 2500 was mostly designed by Japanese programmers/engineers. MPC 5000?

I will attempt to shed light on this (please correct me if I am wrong).
To get 96 ppqn on an MPC (2000/2000XL/25000, etc) you have to turn off quantize. Once it is turn on you get:
1/8 = 8 ppqn
1/16 = 16 ppqn
1/32 = 32 ppqn
1/32(3) = 48 ppqn
With the MPC 5000, you get 960 ppqn when quantize is turned off. When it is turned on, you get what I wrote above. Now...I am not sure if I am calculating this correctly, but if you set quantize to 1/64(3), that should give you 96 ppqn

Avene wrote:I will attempt to shed light on this (please correct me if I am wrong).
To get 96 ppqn on an MPC (2000/2000XL/25000, etc) you have to turn off quantize. Once it is turn on you get:
1/8 = 8 ppqn
1/16 = 16 ppqn
1/32 = 32 ppqn
1/32(3) = 48 ppqn
With the MPC 5000, you get 960 ppqn when quantize is turned off. When it is turned on, you get what I wrote above. Now...I am not sure if I am calculating this correctly, but if you set quantize to 1/64(3), that should give you 96 ppqn
No, that's not it. PPQN= Pulses Per Quarter Note, with each quarter note being a beat in length. So it's like this -
1/8 = 2 ppqn
1/16 = 4 ppqn
1/32 = 8 ppqn
1/32(3) or 1/48 = 12 ppqn
IMO, 960 ppqn is overkill. Nobody's gonna hear that.


mikolo wrote:just to clarify:
a quarter note is a beat and not a bar/measure.
The terminology is derived from the idea of dividing up a bar: divide a bar into 4 and you get 4 1/4notes or a bar of 4/4, a note length which is an eighth of a 4/4 bar is an eigth note and so on.
mikolo wrote:As far as whether you have 96ppqn with quantize on its a matter of perspective. If you have quantize set to 1/8ths you could say that you still have 96 ppqn but just that the recorded or quantized notes are assigned to only two possible values :either on 0 ticks or on 48 ticks. If you then shift the timing of individual notes (or set shift timing as a quantize setting) you still have access to all the other ticks in each quarter note.To me this makes more sense, cause its not like if you turn on quantize the numbers change in step edit to reflect "8ppqn" or whatever,but rather the numbers are listed as described above (where an offbeat eight note hits at .48 ticks).

