Master Mode
MAIN
11-3
Master Table Lock (Master Lock)
With
Master
Lock
set
to
Off
,
the
PC3K
will
save
the
current
Master
mode
configuration
when
you
exit
Master
mode
(or
MIDI
mode).
This
information
is
stored
in
a
Master
Table
object
(see
Save
on page 11
‐
16
below
for
more
details
on
what
is
saved
with
a
Master
Table.)
If
you
have
a
particular
Master
configuration
that
you
would
like
to
safeguard
against
the
auto
‐
saving
feature,
set
Master
Lock
to
On
.
With
the
Master
Lock
on,
the
PC3K
does
not
save
any
changes
unless
you
press
the
Save
soft
button.
Note
that
if
you
would
like
Master
Lock
to
stay
on
next
time
you
turn
on
the
PC3K,
you
must
press
the
Save
soft
button
to
store
the
state
of
Master
Lock
to
the
Master
Table.
Demo Button
The
Demo
Button
parameter
determines
what
pressing
the
Play/Pause
button
does
in
program
mode.
With
the
Demo
button
parameter
set
to
On,
the
Play/Pause
button
plays
a
demo
song
for
the
current
program.
(To
play
a
demo
song,
the
Demo
Song
parameter
must
be
set
in
the
program
editor
for
the
current
program,
see
page 6
‐
36
for
details.)
With
the
Demo
button
parameter
set
to
Off,
the
Play/Pause
button
plays
the
last
song
that
was
selected
in
Song
Mode.
If
a
demo
song
is
set
for
the
current
program,
it
can
always
be
played
from
program
mode
by
simultaneously
pressing
the
up
and
down
cursor
buttons.
Buttons Mode (Buttons)
If
you
set
the
Buttons
parameter
to
On
,
pressing
any
buttons
on
the
PC3K
will
generate
System
Exclusive
(SysEx)
messages
that
are
sent
to
the
MIDI
Out
port.
This
enables
you
to
do
two
things:
control
a
remote
PC3K,
and/or
record
sequences
of
programming
button
presses
to
a
sequencer
or
SysEx
software
package.
If
you
have
the
MIDI
In
port
of
another
PC3K
connected
to
the
first
one’s
MIDI
Out
port,
the
second
instrument
will
respond
to
every
button
press
on
the
first
instrument,
just
as
if
you
were
pressing
the
buttons
of
the
second
one.
Keep
in
mind
that
both
devices
must
be
in
exactly
the
same
state
(the
same
page
in
the
same
mode,
with
identical
lists
of
RAM
objects)
when
you
start.
Otherwise
the
button
presses
you
make
on
the
first
instrument
may
execute
other
functions
on
the
second
instrument.
Again,
it’s
important
to
keep
in
mind
that
the
state
of
your
PC3K
must
be
identical
to
its
state
when
you
recorded
the
sequence
of
button
presses.
If
you’ve
added
or
deleted
any
objects
stored
in
RAM,
for
example,
the
sequence
of
button
presses
will
select
different
objects
when
you
play
back
the
button
press
sequence.
NOTE:
Make
sure
this
parameter
is
set
to
Off
before
you
initiate
a
SysEx
dump
of
any
kind.
If
this
parameter
is
on
when
you
start
a
dump,
the
buttons
you
press
to
begin
the
dump
will
also
generate
SysEx
messages.
Summary of Contents for PC3K6
Page 24: ...1 6 Introduction Options...
Page 50: ...4 4 The Operating Modes Using the Modes...
Page 58: ...5 8 Editing Conventions Special Button Functions...
Page 130: ...6 72 Program Mode Programming Tips...
Page 202: ...7 72 Setup Mode Recording A Setup To Song Mode...
Page 206: ...8 4 Quick Access Mode The QA Editor...
Page 232: ...9 26 Effects Mono Algorithms...
Page 268: ...11 18 Master Mode Preview Sample PRVIEW...
Page 302: ...12 34 Song Mode and the Song Editor Song Editor The EVENT Page...
Page 328: ...14 14 Keymap and Sample Editing Editing Samples...
Page 334: ...B 4...
Page 370: ...D 32 PC3K Objects V 1 31 Effect Chains...
Page 372: ...E 2 PC3K Legacy File Conversion Object Types and Conversion Details...