![]() What that means is that if you didnt want to plug anything into those you can still assign them on the midi, so if you took a midi lead out of the drum module into the sample pad pro you can set those unused zones to trigger samples / loops etc on anything you hit on the kit, e.g. Now the 8 pad one is a different animal, it has got 2 x extra trigger inputs one is dual zone, plus kick input, plus variable hi-hat input (since you can use it as a complete kit), plus 5 pin midi in and out as well as the usb, meaning it is capable of 12 triggers with dual layering on the velocity plus the hi-hat pedal that switches a pad into 3 dual layers on potition if you play local samples (ouputs cc position to midi). The 4 pad one also has an extra dual zone trigger input as well which would potentially give you 6 triggers altogether and with velocity layering that is potentially 12 samples One thing is the load time on the samples isnt the fastest for mid song swaps, so if you think you may want more samples in the future you could look at the 8 pad one. It is well built and can (and indeed mine has many times) take a beating. They are best as either extra sampled pieces, loops and of course extra midi triggers rather than complete backing tracks. I am assuming software wise they will be the same. ![]() I know nothing of the 4 version, but I do have an 8 pad one I got mid last year if thats any help. ![]()
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