@Andreas8420 said:
When you have one active mic position and you play one note, you hear one voice. If you play the note multiple times you hear more samples on the same note, because you played the note more often. Instead of indefinitely layering samples on top of each other, the player drops samples (voices) at some point.
It's becoming clearer now. If I hold the sustain pedal and strike a key, that will sound one voice. While holding the sustain pedal and striking the key 4 times I'll hear the 4 voices of that sample (layered). When I strike the key the 5th time (holding the pedal down) the first voice I had activated will be dropped (presuming the defualt is set to 4)and so on and so on. I presume it works the same way for the mic voices.
@Andreas8420 said:
It's pretty much like a real piano. Sit down and play one key one time with the pedal pressed down. This is going to sound slightly different than playing the same note 3-4 times. But it does not really make a difference if you play it 30 or 50 times.
I think this explains what you mean by "without changing what you hear." Past 3 or 4 layers (individual key strikes with the pedal down) the change in the sound is negligible. Increasing the default voice per key might add more sampled layers of repeated pedal down single key strikes (using more computer resources) without actually producing a discernible difference in the sound.
If everything I said is accurate than I definitely understand it better than I did before. 👍
Standby for more questions (possibly). 🙂 Thanks for the help.
God Bless,
David