Feb 13, 2008 - I was at a rehearsal last night and had to shut down Kore 2 about 10 times, unplug the CME USB and plug it back in. Then I had to re-boot K2 and load my rather large performance. I'm using a Sony Vaio, CME UF6, Windows Vista and Kore 1 Controller. I have installed the workaround patch for the UF6 with. Casio ctk-810 driver download; cme uf5 keyboard driver download; cme uf5 driver; drivers: ga 7vaxp ultra; mitsai mouse drivers download; smc ez connect g 802.11g wireless usb 2.0 adapter drivers for windows 10; 6825 12u driver download; saffire le driver download; yamaha psr 540 midi treiber windows 10. UF Driver for Intel MAC v1.0 Installation: It installs very easy.Just unzip the file,then run CME-UF-MIDI-1.2u.pkg to install the driver.
Trying to set the CME UF series of mastercontrollers as the main MIDI input in Reaper causes the system to hang with 100% pegged CPU usage. This was using the USB driver, the latest from CME's web site. Eventually, I was able to kill the process. Here is my setup: Athlon64 3200+ CPU (running 32-bit Windows) 512MB RAM SATA hard disk (250GB) USB 2.0 MSI ATI Radeon 9-something-00 video card On-board sound (I didn't feel like lugging my outboard sound interface to my friend's place, where I learned all of this he owns the CME) We later tried an old Midiman Oxygen8 with M-Audio's latest driver for USB, and it worked great, so the issue is not MIDI over USB in general. I'll answer any more questions you might have.
CME UF5 is what I have, and its own usb out isn't worth wasting your time on at all. That's based on what everyone else who has a UF says. CME can't figure out how to write usb drivers, and they probably never will. Just use midi through a midi to usb interface or some other midi in if you've got one on a pci card or firewire interface, and it's great.
Yep that usually jacks up the cost of a UF by $60 to $300. Once you're not using that usb output: The white transport controls aren't supposed to work, and you have to use the power supply. That's almost the same as unplugging and re-plugging it at the usb cable.
Windows knows where its drivers are, so it recognizes and uses those Cme drivers. That's how it goes even after a reboot.
So, the next way to test it would be to go through all that registry cleaning to make sure Windows has no idea that those Cme drivers exist. I don't remember if I attempted that. I did clean the registry, but that was when I hooked it up through a midi interface.
I'm quite sure that Windows is going to refuse to install anything until it gets those CME drivers. I think you either have to give it those drivers or cancel out of the auto-detect and end up with those red x entries in the Device Manger. About the original situation where Reaper was freezing as it starts with the Cme drivers loaded. It was doing that on Windows 2000 too. But, almost every program that I ran had some kind of problem with Cme UF drivers. It was some new strange thing with different software.
The freezing just happened to be the particular reaction Reaper had.
I am considering getting rid of my CME-UF5 Midi keyboard since there is no possibility of running it under Windows 7 and purchasing something new. Anybody have any suggestions as to what I should be looking? Besides this make, and M-Audio I really don't know what my other options really are.
Although I did like the quality and weight of the keys with CME vs M-Audio, I suspect M-Audio would have much better driver support and customer support for future updates, CME was certainly lacking in this department considering they didn't even provide a Vista driver for this damn thing. I browsed through forums and it seems that someone had created their own Vista driver for it by modyfing the XP one while others claimed that due to the hardware inside this keyboard, there would be no way to run it outside of an 32bit XP environment. I am considering getting rid of my CME-UF5 Midi keyboard since there is no possibility of running it under Windows 7 and purchasing something new.Why would you think this? MIDI is MIDI and the model keyboard you have is irrelevant. It's all about the MIDI interface you have. If you are using an old interface through a game port you just need to upgrade to a USB port interface or purchase a card that has MIDI ports built in like some of the M-Audio cards do.
If you buy a new keyboard and use the interface that doesn't work with Win7 you'll be wasting money. You know this occurred to me just shortly after I made that post. Currently I am obviously using it via USB. As for my audio I am using onboard sound.
But say for instance, I upgraded my sound card to something better which had a midi input like a 'creative' or even 'M-Audio' card, you're saying MIDI is MIDI as long as the sound card has drivers to work with Windows 7 I can use my CME keyboard via MIDI interface with no issues under Windows 7. Do I have that right, if so I'll be relieved because I'd MUCH rather have this option as I really like this keyboard and got it for too good of a price to have to give it up. Let's start with the basics. You say Ableton Live is working but yet you also say you can't use the keyboard. Just because the software loads doesn't mean it's working.
You don't mention what function is not working. Can you play MIDI files from disk to your sound card?
Can you record from your keyboard? I looked up the CME-UF5 specs and see it is only a controller with no on-board sounds. Do you have a separate sound module? Does the system recognize the device when you plug the USB cable in? You typically don't have MIDI drivers for an instrument or even for a given sequencing program. You usually have drivers for the interface whether it's a card, a game port, or a USB device. You're software may be designed to control specific functions only you keyboard has but it also be able to handle General MIDI.
Buy this: before you replace your keyboard. MIDI is an industry standard format that doesn't send audio signals but performance data such as which key is pressed, how long it is held down, how quickly it was pressed, and which instrument is mapped to that key. That's why MIDI files are so small and they work with every MIDI device. Without knowing exactly what the specific problem is you should check the following:. Check power to all devices.
Check cabling. Move USB cable to a different USB port. (Mine burnt out once).
Check USB status in Device Manager. Check MIDI Playback device in Sounds and Audio part of Control Panel. Check the default Record/Playback device in Ableton.
Download a shareware MIDI sequencer and see if that works. Finally, try the Vista driver at Hope that helps some. You should be able to plug your keyboard into any MIDI computer and and any keyboard into your system. Ok, I'm not sure if I am mis-communicating but we are making this a bit more confusing than it has to be I think. I do know all about MIDI. This CME keyboard is simply a controller, ie, it cannot be run without software on the computer, it acts just like a regular keyboard, sending signals to the software. This keyboard has USB and MIDI out.
Prior to Win7 I was using it in XP, with the USB out, with the USB driver from their site, and Ableton Live, was one of my several MIDI sequencers I have been using. (FLStudio, Acid pro were some of the others but thats irrelavent). My point is that even with the USB driver this keyboard will not do anything until you have software with VST's (virtual instruments). Under Win 7, I have Ableton Live running just fine.
The software itself is doing it's job, for example I can load my saved work, and play VST instruments using my regular qwerty keyboard as the 'signal sender'. I cannot however use my CME keyboard via USB because there is no USB driver that works in Vista/7 for this model therefore windows or ableton does not recognize the device when I connect it via USB. The link you referenced is the main download page but the vista driver shown is not for my model keyboard. So my question is, if I buy an audio card with MIDI in like this one: As long as the audio card itself has appropriate drivers fir Win7 and functions properly, than I can switch and use the MIDI out on my CME to send the signals to my software correct? Simply put, scratch the idea of using USB and finding a driver for the CME KEYBOARD (since there isn't one) and use the MIDI out which would only require an audio card with a driver that works. Am I confusing you more or did this explain it better.
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