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| quote: | Originally posted by echosystm
A counterweight improves speed when depressing a key, since you don't need to press it all the way to the bottom. However, it slows down the rebound, because there is greater resistance. Conversely, an unweighted key is slow to depress, because you have to push it all the way down. However, the rebound will always be faster as there is less resistance.
I'll agree weighted keys have a speed benefit when you aren't hitting the same keys in rapid succession. However, I'm talking about trill and sputter, where the whole point is to hit the same keys very quickly. Thus, rebound speed is essential; you won't get a proper stroke unless the keys have mostly rebounded between hits.
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The weight doesn't affect the speed of the pressing of the key. That comes from your arms and it is negligle. It is the counterweight in the action that makes the repound snappier with weighted keys, You have it backwards. Non weighted keys use a simple spring. They are usually much slower unless you are a shit player then you probably play a weighted keyboard with just your fingers and well ya, if you don't know how to play you would find it harder. You could not do a say a 3 finger trill on 1 key like you could on a weighted keyboard.
And it is exactly the resistance that makes the weighted keys want to be up, rather than down. It takes more energy to push them down but that energy tends to be bounced back. Again not all weighted actions are equal but regular spring action keyboards seem faster to people that can't play.
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