Roland JV-90
| (No photo yet. Please contribute one!) | |
| W × H × D (mm) | 1200 × 85 × 305[1] |
|---|---|
| Weight | 9.9 kg (JV-80)[1] |
| Type | Fully-editable ROMpler sound module |
| Keyboard | 76 keys[1] |
| Manufacturer | Roland |
| Release date | 1993 |
| Standards | None |
| Parts | 7 parts + 1 rhythm[1] |
| Max polyphony | 28[1] |
| Normal presets | 320 (total) 256 (preset, 4 banks of 64 patches) 64 (user)[1] |
| Drum presets | 5 (total) 4 (preset, 1 for each bank) 1 (user)[1] |
| Expansion | 1× SR-JV80 PCM Card Slot SO-PCM1 DATA Card Slot M256E / 512E PN-JV80 VE series |
| Effects | Reverb (8 types), Chorus (3 types)[1] |
| ← Roland JV-880 | |
| Roland JV-1080 → | |
The Roland JV-90 is a successor to the Roland JV-80, implementing with it a slightly expanded list of waveforms (129 to 152), extra sound banks, VE series expandability (which can add either a GS-based synth or another JV-90 based synth), and a 76-note keyboard with both velocity and aftertouch sensitivity.
Apart from this, it is largely the same product as the previous iteration, with the same limitations.
Oddities
- While you can access the JV-80's preset banks from the JV-90, doing so requires holding down the PCM CARD (A/B) while pressing the USER button.[2]
- The last patch, labeled B8-8, is Analog Seq on the JV-80, however on the JV-90 it is "INITIAL DATA" instead. The manual states that patch D8-6 is equivalent to Analog Seq on the new synthesizer.
- Some JV-80 patches have been ported over to some of the new banks, or very similar sounds exist, so doing this may not be required at all.
Roland JV-1000
The Roland JV-1000 is a variant of the JV-90 that adds a Roland MC-50mkII based sequencer and a floppy disk drive.