Product Description
Pedal unit for the DGX640, YPG635 and DGX630. The Yamaha LP7A three piano-style pedals offer the same kind of functional the sustain, sostenuto and soft control found on grand pianos with half-damper effect.
| List Price: | $89.00 |
| Price: |
$74.97 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
| as of Mon, 18 Mar 2013 03:27:36 GMT ***Remember, deals price on this item for sale just for limited time*** | |
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #840 in Musical Instruments
- Brand: Yamaha
- Model: LP7A
- Released on: 2010-10-01
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 6.96" h x 12.28" w x 53.77" l, 16.00 pounds
Features
- Damper, Soft and Sostenuto pedals
- Half Damper effect for expressive control over sustained sound
- Allows the performer to add more refined musical expressiveness
- Perfect for piano players and music students
- Attaches to DGX-640
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
19 of 19 people found the following review helpful.Essential to turn the YPG-635 into a more accurate simulation of a piano
By N. J. Simicich
So, what does a piano have that a keyboard generally doesn't? Simple answer: pedals. This adds three pedals to the high end home keyboards.
Yamaha gives you a small portable style pedal that only does full sustain with the YPG-635. This unit gives you full piano pedal function.
Installation is a snap, provided you are using the original Yamaha stand. There are holes in the sideboards that are filled with little rubber plugs, and four screws come with the pedal kit that mount it to the side boards once you remove the plugs. There are two screws (and little sleeves) that mount the pedal assembly to the cross piece. The wood is "machined" and fits the stand fairly precisely.
The wire is long enough to stay out of the way and there are wire guides that should be mounted to the wire before the paper adhesive covers are removed.
The left pedal is a soft pedal. Right is a sustain, and the middle is a "sostenudo" if I have that correct. In any case, if you have chorded and want that chord to be sustained, and then want to play a progression, and want the subsequent chords not to be sustained even though the first chord is sustained, you play and hold the first chord, then press the pedal, then play your other chords, and it sustains any chords that are being held when you first press the pedal, and does not sustain chords that are played after you press the pedal. In other words, notes that are being held when you press the pedal are sustained, and notes played after you press the pedal are not sustained.
The sustain mimics a piano - it won't sustain forever even if you don't release the pedal - eventually it decays, just like a piano does.
I'm told that one of the pedals makes some muting alterations to some of the registers - the trumpet sounds like it is muted, not just quieter, or something. I have not had a chance to investigate and am more interested in the YPG-635 as a piano than as a keyboard.
The attachment to the keyboard is a special connector. The pedals have a piano pedal feel.
I like the YPG-635 - the action is amazingly faithful to a real piano - it feels like you are playing a hammer action - better than any electric I've tried, including those that cost more - and those that cost less. This adds pedals to complete the piano experience.
The instructions talk about adding the pedal assembly early in the stand assembly process but it should be no trouble adding the pedal assembly to the piano even thought he assembly is complete.
My daughter and I put the whole thing together in just a few minutes. Putting this on should take 20 minutes, of which 10 minutes is finding the phillips screw driver. It takes a #1 and a #2 phillips to do the job correctly.
The pedal height is easily adjustable. Loosen the two screws and move the pedals up or down, then tighten them.
When I ordered this device it was supplied by 8th Street. They shipped it promptly (had they delayed a day it would have missed xmas) and it was shipped in the original packaging, which required a little dancing as we got home since wife did not know she was getting a piano for Christmas (the piano was purchased locally - it is a tiny bit too heavy to ship).
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful.It works, and you can see the picture!
By mondele
This pedal set works very well with the Yamaha DGX-640 we purchased. The mounting bar fits exactly into the existing stand and makes it even more solid than it already was. By ordering online, the money I saved in sales tax almost paid for the pedals. While it would be nice to have something that looked more impressive, the piano it's attached to isn't exactly a concert grand in style, so I am resigned. I certainly don't think it's worth deducting stars for something that is obvious from the product photos, and when there isn't any competing product at this point.
9 of 11 people found the following review helpful.THE YAMAHA PEDAL UNIT LP7A IS NOT COMPATIBLE WITH THE YAMAHA L85 STAND.
By K. Latona
THE YAMAHA PEDAL UNIT LP7A IS NOT COMPATIBLE WITH THE YAMAHA L85 STAND. THE LP7A PEDAL UNIT IS ABOUT AN INCH TO AN INCH AND A HALF TOO LONG FOR THE L85 STAND. GET THE LP5A PEDAL UNIT FOR THE L85 STAND.
Amazon says:
Yamaha LP7A Keyboard Foot Pedal Unit
Product Description
The Yamaha LP7A pedal . . . designed for use with Yamaha's . . . P95 digital pianos.
Product Features
* 3-pedal unit
* Half-damper
* Compatible with Yamaha L85 stand and P95 digital piano
Amazon does NOT say that Pedal Unit is NOT compatible with the L85 stand. To the contrary , it says that the LP7A Pedal Unit IS compatible with the L85 stand.
To be fair, Amazon also says:
Yamaha L85 Keyboard Stand for Yamaha P95 Keyboard
Product Description
The Yamaha L85 stand is a great platform for your Yamaha P85/P95 digital piano. It's compatible with the optional LP5 pedal unit (sold separately). P85/P95 Keyboard sold separately.
Once again, Amazon does not say that Pedal Unit LP7A is NOT compatible with the L85 stand.
HOWEVER, IN FACT, THE YAMAHA PEDAL UNIT LP7A IS NOT COMPATIBLE WITH THE YAMAHA L85 STAND. THE LP7A PEDAL UNIT IS ABOUT AN INCH TO AN INCH AND A HALF TOO LONG FOR THE L85 STAND. GET THE LP5A PEDAL UNIT FOR THE L85 STAND.
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