MC - Thanks for the link to the 6 year old dinosaur thread. You wrote:
"Dusty topic (cough cough). There are three known 'standards' (which in fact doesn't exist) for octave numbering. C4 = MIDI note 60 is called the most common one, which is why I changed to it in the manuals some years ago. C3 = 60 has been introduced by Yamaha keyboards and is therefore also found in DAW software (but not all). The most seldom used one is where the lowest octave for the lowest MIDI note is 0 (instead of -1 or -2). Here MIDI note 60 equals C5.
Point is: the MIDI note number is always right and the same on all these systems, and will therefore work."
Since the button presses are entirely on Behringer X Touch Mini sending to TotalMix FX software, and having the Behringer setup to send as FF400 manual says:
Snapshot 1: 36 / 54 / #F 3
Snapshot 2: 37 / 55 / G 3
It should work. This is not like an issue where say Cubase sees a C3 note coming in but plays it as C4 or something like that. This is taken directly from the FF400 manual saying "if you want to load snapshot 1, send MIDI F#3 on channel 1". In order to load snapshot 1 I actually had to program the button for F#2 and not F#3. Are you saying that the Behrginer itself is using a different standard and even though the software tool to program it says F#3 it is not actually sending F#3?
This also did not translate correctly on the CC for fader control on the various channel controls I wanted.
The manual says for fader control:
MIDI Channel 9
CC102 : AN 1 Fader : 0 - 127
CC103 : AN 2 Fader : 0 - 127
CC104 : AN 3 Fader : 0 - 127
CC105 : AN 4 Fader : 0 - 127
CC106 : AN 5 Fader : 0 - 127
CC107 : AN 6 Fader : 0 - 127
CC108 : AN 7 Fader : 0 - 127
CC109 : AN 8 Fader : 0 - 127
CC108 or CC109 actually moved the the SPDIF and not my analog 7/8 outputs (headphone).
I took a guess and made it CC107 which DOES work to control analog 7/8 hardware output fader. Is this another standard issue? I'm just trying to wrap my head around this and learn from you so I don't have more headache on future custom programming stuff as I get better with TMFX.
thank you for your great hardware and software. i love my 15 year old ff400.