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Akai S20

Summary
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Manufacturer URL http://www.akaipro.com/
Ease of Use 8.0 (18 responses)
Features 5.6 (17 responses)
Expressiveness/Sounds 7.8 (16 responses)
Reliability 7.3 (16 responses)
Customer Support 6.7 (6 responses)
Overall Rating 7.0 (17 responses)
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Product: Akai S20
Price Paid: US $60 used
Submitted 11/25/2005 at 01:07pm by nick vitou

Ease of Use : 10
any one who can read and count can use this machine

Features : 10
it dosen't claim to do more than it can and it does what it can very well.

Expressiveness/Sounds : 10
the sound is not realistic. it sounds like a sega genesis. and thats why i love it. i think that it must have some type of built in limiter as well. it never really clips in the digital sense, rather, it just gets fuzzy. which sounds good.

Reliability : 8
i have performed many times with a number of different s20s and they all pull through. the disk drive and the buttons are the first thing to go.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
i've owned 2 in the last 7 years. the first was the best it was about a year old when i bought it and it was my first real sampler i paid 400 dollars for it in 1997. i slept with it the first night that i got it. this is the best sounding sampler ever made, it is the warmest, thickest, grittyest sampler ever. the only thing is that this sampler is quiet and requires post output amp to sound loud, but that is a dust speck on the solid tank of a machine that this sampler is.

the last one that i bought cost $60 w/ shipping off of e bay. the disk drive is a little funny but it still works and still sounds great as ever.

the first one was conected to a phantom load and began to smoke. it, along with my friends s20, was destroyed. that is to say that the inputs no longer work. the samplers still load and play disks from other s20s. that was september 11th 2002 odd.


Product: Akai S20
Price Paid: US $130 used
Submitted 04/30/2005 at 11:41pm by toby

Ease of Use : 10
Making loops couldn't be more simple. I had it down in an hour or so. There is no waveform editing but if you pitch the sample you're editing way down you can get the start and end points bang on. Make sure loop length equals sample length and you're done.
The manual tells you everything you need to know.

Features : 6
8 voices of polyphony i think which seems to be enough as I sample in mono. No effects. The pads and buttons make a loud clicking sound when pressed. It takes a 16mb expansion ontop of the 1mb standard giving you over 4 minutes sampling time at 32khz mono. The worst feature of this machine is you can only have one bank of 16 samples loaded up at a time, leaving a big chunk of the memory unused. If you could load multiple banks in and switch between them the s20 would kick some serious ass. No SCSI either, just floppies.
It claims to have a sequencer but it doesn't!

Expressiveness/Sounds : 8
I dj deep house and the s20 is a fantastic addition to just mixing between two decks. You can get one loop in sync with the record that's playing, hit 'master tempo' on the s20 and the whole bank is synced up. I really enjoy using it for djing but if you want something for the studio go for an old E-mu - way more features very similar price.
As a dj tool I give it an 8.

Reliability : 9
When mine arrived by post it wasn't recognising the memory stick. I pulled it out, put it back in and everything's fine. The floppy drive sometimes won't read or write discs but it's really easy and cheap to pull out and install a new one. I just haven't been bothered.
Overall I think it's very dependable.

Customer Support : 10
I asked a couple of questions by email and an answer in about 12 hours.

Overall Rating : 7
I've owned quite a bit of synth gear over the years and this is definately the easiest to use. Very limited but plenty of fun. If it's a cheap 90's phrase sampler you're after this is the one to get! If it could load more than one bank and had an actual sequencer this thing would not leave my side!


Product: Akai S20
Price Paid: 90 (#)
Submitted 02/02/2005 at 10:01am by mike
Email: wappie_man at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 10
So easy! I probably had help at college when using it but about a week (I remember) I was so easy I picked it up in no time. There's not much of an Operating System if not then there's isn't one at all. It's all-straight forward: you plug in your source (via 2 phono's) press 'rec', set the levels and choose (mono or stereo) then hit either of the big chunky buttons (1-16). Then edit it (cut,trim,loop,resample etc)

Features : 6
features? not many really. Not sure what polyphony is but if i were you i would have all your samples mono as stereo will eat up polyphony.
In case you don't want to hog up all your 16 midi channels you can do 'Prog's (programs) this just means you can have lots of samples on ONE of 16 midichannels but each sample has its space on the keyboard (you map them out).
Oh yeah and all your usual edits (no time stretch or filters though!)

I put 6 because of the damn floppy drive fuss you have to go thru.

Expressiveness/Sounds : 10
Sounds chunky'n'crunchy. It's true - grit and grunge is added which is nice.
Also the 'Resample' feature isn't just there to fit more samples on disk but you can use it to get some super-crunchy lo-fi sounds. goes down to 4bits (actaully is it bits or sample rate? most likley sample rate)
anyway. Yeah... good bass too. Sample an 808 bass drum and it comes out with that punch at the begining and the HmMMmmmmmm at the end.

Reliability : No Opinion
careful with the powerlead on the back it might fall out and in some case you might loose all your samples (HAS ***NO*** internal harddrive)
Built like a shit brick house..dropped it but it still works fine. But don't hit those sample pad buttons too hard just in case.

Customer Support : 1
bah!

Overall Rating : 10
Good but can eat up MIDI channels. I only have this S20 and an old Roland MC-500MKII and altho that's all i have - I make the best Acid-house music anyone has heard just using 16 samples!

Yeah it's good buy one and don't beleive people who say it's crap - it's not!


Product: Akai S20
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 06/15/2004 at 12:56am by Dylan Hicks

Ease of Use : 9
Indeed, it is quite easy to use. But that's considering I'm used to gear without intuituve displays, (hence the 4-digit diplay on this one).
There isn't much you can do with it, which is really why it's just so damn simple.

If it had a bigger display, maybe even one that could display
all the letters of the alphabet, then maybe I'd give it a ten.

Features : No Opinion
Polyphony? I'm not sure. My manual's missing, but I think it can play up to 8 channels, (4 stereo). Why should I tell you these things anyways? I'm not the designer of this sampler. That's what the product specs are for!

Expressiveness/Sounds : 5
It's pretty transparent if you're working with tape recordings and records, but watch out when sampling digital or other >15kc audio.
There isn't any filtering on the inputs so it'll create all sorts of
whacked-out sub-harmonics and aliases when you record that crisp stuff.

If you're going to record that kind of material, chop it off at
15KHz with a good equalizer.

Using rates lower than 32 makes for really nasty sound.
The output is only filtered for the 32K rate, so it's the only
one that isn't going to sound like crap. Use 32, or, if you have
another equalizer, stick it between the output and your amp or whatever and cut off the upper bands. (3.5KHz cut-off for 8K, and 7KHz for 16K)

Reliability : 2
Don't wiggle the power cable. There is not a smidgen of memory-backup in the S20, so you'll lose everything if the power is interrupted for even half a second. Save to disk often, and put a stick-on cable tie thing on the back so you can't pull the connector out.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No comment.

Overall Rating : 8
This is basically the bare-bones phrase sampler. If you're a band that does alot of freakish music with samples of cable-tv preachers and percussion loops, this is the cheap sampler for you.


Product: Akai S20
Price Paid: #85 (UK Pounds) used
Submitted 09/21/2003 at 11:23am by Anon

Ease of Use : 9
I actually have a remix 16 but they seem to be very similar. Very easy to use great for little samples to spice up a dj set. (if prepared in advance). Very easy to loop on just listen to the start/end points as you twiddle the knobs and ignore those random numbers.

Features : 5
polyphony is shit. 16 samples. 4 at once (in stereo). yet to work out how to get scsi to work and find 16mb simm to upgrade. Sequencer isokay as a a quick test bed but overall is pointless. use a pc sequencer controlling the samples via midi.

Expressiveness/Sounds : 6
Great for trip hop. easy to loop and sample from record deck.

Reliability : 10
built like a tank. solid metal case with replaceble faders. only problem is some leds in mine have slipped and re hard to see.

Customer Support : No Opinion
n/a

Overall Rating : 10
Definately worth the 85 quid i payed. first sampler i bought having played around using dj cd decks to loop cds. Anyone who thinks this is hard to use should try making a track using a dj setup - 2 loops n cd and 2 decks.


Product: Akai S20
Price Paid: US $350 used
Submitted 07/09/2003 at 02:04am by http://www.kase.fi/panusa

Ease of Use : 7
I had S20 back to 1999. It made most of loops and drums. S-20 is quite easy to use and sound was enough for me.

Features : 7
Polyphony cuts when stereo loops used, but it was still enough for my need. No effects or other processing. Easy to loop stuff. I had maximum 17megs RAM and that was more than enough.

Expressiveness/Sounds : 8
Good sound quality. Sadly no cool filters and stuff in this machine but it ment to be phrase-sampler and very cheap one.

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 7
Why I sold it? It wasn't able to save any settings. So everything I made to samples they vere gone when I restarted it. For live use, it would be great for the price but nowadays with software samplers, I wouldn't get it. Also there is no SCSI so it's quite painful to use floppies only. If you have not much money and want live-sampler, Akai give very good quality with little money.


Product: Akai S20
Price Paid: US $200 used
Submitted 01/25/2003 at 03:46pm by Rick

Ease of Use : 10
Easy to use, almost too easy. :)

Features : 9
very small feature list, but for the price who'z crazy enough to complain....just basic sampling and easy looping mainly.

Expressiveness/Sounds : 9
The sound is perfect for my ears. 16 bit is a little better than 12 yet it still has that grunge quality that I like....not quite as clean as the 20 bit or higher

Reliability : 10
very much rock solid like all Akai stuff---built like a tank

Customer Support : 8
they are helpful and nice guys...when you can get thru on the line that is

Overall Rating : 10
try to get one with 17 mb of memory so you dont have to mess with the upgrade. This is a great value in a sampler. Low on features but absolutely the cat's pajamas for LOOPING!! This baby does that so well, that I may get another one at these prices. dont buy it if you want full featured sampler....this one has looping in mind and simple drum beats...works like a charm


Product: Akai S20
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 08/08/2002 at 12:59pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 8
pretty easy to use in terms of getting samples in. beat loop function was kind of neat when i first got it but later realized unincredible this feature really was.

Features : 2
sample playback, thats about its only feature. no tweakablility at all. very disappointing.
i aslo hated loading my samples from floppys. it took forever and sometimes didnt work at. maybe it was corrupted disks.

Expressiveness/Sounds : 10
sound quality was good but i had hard time expressing my self throught this little box of plastic.

Reliability : 3
no, i used with out back up live and it crapped out on me. it wouldnt load my samples.

Customer Support : No Opinion
never called

Overall Rating : 3
this was my first sampler and after being so frustrated trying to get it to do something cool, i gave up on electronic music all together and started singing country music. well, not exactly but i havent bought another piece of electronic music gear since. i sold it about a year and a half after buying it. i guess its a good box if you want to learn the absolute fundamentals of sampling and playing with loops but thats about it. i couldnt imagine trying to use it as a dj. in a live band it was pretty useless and as a studio production tool its just to0 limited to really make anything happen.

this box just wasnt for me....


Product: Akai S20
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/03/2001 at 06:37pm by kgfloyd

Ease of Use : 10
this is the most simple and quick way to sample that i have experienced! for the few nay-sayers of it's ease of use, i say go find an old casio sk-1. it's 1 second of sample time and 1 button operation will suit your under-developed sampling skills well.

Features : 5
the S20 is lacking in this department...no effects, limited polyphony,
useless sequencer, limited editing. then again akai made no claim of overwhelming power. the idea was to provide a stereo sampler with a good amount of memory capability at a reasonable price. they succeeded admirably.

Expressiveness/Sounds : 9
it's a sampler, therefore you get back what you put in. if you are a creative musician, there are no limits. i will say though, that the S20 adds a certain crunchiness and reproduces beat and basslines with a fatness not heard in most samplers. this makes it ideal for hip hop, trip hop and similar loopy styles.

Reliability : 10
i have used the S20 for about 5 years now and have had no problems with it.

Customer Support : No Opinion
i have had no need for customer service

Overall Rating : 10
i have been using synths, samplers, and other midi gear for 18yrs.
if the S20 were lost or stolen, i would certainly re-purchase. i am sure i could pick one up for alot less than i paid new 5 years ago.
it is hard to beat for ease of use and phatt sound.


Product: Akai S20
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 07/28/2001 at 01:46am by Dr.Rubberfunk
Email: simon at funkydown<dot>co<dot>uk

Ease of Use : 9
Read the manual (very straight forward), power up, load the demo discs and off you go. No assigning samples to banks / groups / presets / audition zones, just pound those buttons! I found editing to be remarkably straight-forward if you use your ears and don't get bogged down in the sample numbers whizzing by in the LCD. You can audition the sample as you edit by holding down the relevant pad, so it's easy to hear the start / end points of your sound.

Features : 8
Most of the features have been covered below, so I won't go into all of them again, but adding more memory makes this a very useful sampler. I expanded the memory to 4MB for #20, which gives me just over 73 seconds of mono sampling. I run out of pads before I run out of memory. The option of a SCSI upgrade (like the Remix 16 had) would've been nice, just for booting samples back and forth to my mac (no Akaidisc type option for mac users) and a step time sequencer instead of a real time sequencer would be great, but I knew this wasn't an MPC when I bought it, and I have my mac to do the sequencing....

Expressiveness/Sounds : 8
Love the crunchy phat sound of the 32k samples, stuff sounds great straight off the records (my main sample source!) No FX, but I didn't want any, good velocity / key range / release and mono trigger functions make this unit ideal for drums.

Reliability : 10
Rock Solid. No wobbly OS upgrades or SCSI issues to worry about, have used it live a number of times without any worries

Customer Support : 10
I've never really had the need for customer support, but I once emailed Akai about possible SCSI upgrades, and they were very prompt in letting me know that there wouldn't be one (!) I also ordered some sample diskettes, which arrived promptly (and cheap too!)

Overall Rating : 9
I bought this new in early 1998 (don't remember exactly how many UKP I paid) because I'd done lots of research into samplers, and this was the one that fitted my requirements and budget. I'd buy another, and if I ever see a cheap enough unit second hand I'd be tempted to buy it and have two on the go. I have hundreds of discs of samples now so I'd definately miss it if it was gone. I've used it on nearly all my music as my main sampler for drums and loops, and I know the machine inside out (which doesn't take long!) I've even sequenced entire tracks on the 'live' sequencer, by taking a little time out to work out which buttons you're pressing where (and being able to count to four!) this gives a great old school feel to tracks. Basically this is a superb phrase sampler and makes a nice little drum box. I can only imagine that those who didn't like it bought it off the shelf without knowing the specifications fully, and were disappointed with the lack of certain features. Like all things, alot comes down to personal taste, but I for one love the playability and hands on appeal of the S20. Akai's idea to make a desktop version of the SO1 was an inspired idea in my opinion. As someone else has mentioned - the S20 has all the attributes of a future classic......

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