

There are a lot of great maschine mikro’s. I don’t think you need to settle for mediocre. Most people really don’t seem to have too many problems with them and there are some bad units out there (as with every pad controller). If you cannot find that sweet spot I would see if you can get another maschine mikro.Experiment with sensitivity settings between 70% and 100% and see if you find a good spot where all pads respond well but also not/ hardly double trigger.I do see those super soft notes in my midi data sometimes even though I don’t hear them while playing. There might still be small differences between hitting a single pad and multiple pads at the same time, but on both my mikro’s I did not notice anything particularly bad.ĭouble triggering if it’s super soft is also something to be expected, as long as it doesn’t happen every time. On the mikro mk3 I also noticed the same thing especially with pads 12 and 7, but this also seemed to go away after a firmware update. Now I never have problems with the big maschine. However, a firmware update fixed all of that. When the device was just released, this lead to weird, softer velocities. Case-sensitive hard drive formats are not supported by Native Instruments products and will prevent the MASCHINE controller to start as expected. The computer's system drive is formatted in a case-sensitive format. Check out MASCHINE Dinamo 750 Pieces worldwide. Click to accept, if you are requested to 'ALLOW' the Native Instruments driver here. Each limited edition run is available once while stocks last. The first time I noticed something was with the big maschine mk3 and hitting the ride cymbal pad (i think that’s pad 12) and the snare on pad 7 at the same time. Limited-edition runs of the MK3 celebrate and cement its legendary studio status with big designs, bold color, and unconventional style. I did experience similar issues throughout the years, but they were not exactly as you describe.
