Thomann SP-320
Digital Piano

Latest User Reviews
Words great, Bad Pedal, Mid-Sound quality
Get this piano in around 5 days which is quick for me since I live in Ireland. Quality is alright, made out of plastic but its still good for the price. Sound quality gets worse as you go to the lower octaves, Much better with headphones on. Pedal was very bad, Got stuck quite often, Had to buy a new pedal for 15euro and it works great. Overall great quality for the cheap price.
Great keyboard, but lacks tactile feel
Overall this is a very nice first piano. The sound is really nice and the range of instruments should satisfy you. Also you can always use this as a midi controller if you are looking for more sounds. However, the action/feel of the keys themselves is underwhelming. It is a far cry from how a real piano feels, where you can feel how the little hammers are hitting the strings. Now every time I see a real piano I get an urge to just try out the keys.
Cheap, nice Piano
Im not pro, Piano Feels little bit cheap, but for the price, Pretty nice, very weak piano Keys to press.
Pretty good for the price
I bought this to start learning the piano, and this one is pretty good, I have tested and compared its performance with an actual grand piano and it did pretty good In comparison, the only issue is the peddle which feels extremely flimsy and rigid.
8/10 would recommend to beginners.
good price for this quality
Cheap, useful, a bit short on options
I believe this is a good option for it's price, but the sound is not the best and it lacks some functionality
Very good
Very good piano especially for beginners! Me and my family are very happy with this new toy!
Excellent first keyboard
I love this keyboard, I'm not a massive fan of the two piano sounds because they are a little compressed sounding, particularly the lower notes, but that's to be expected with a virtual piano, and I only really bought it for the Pipe Organ sound anyway.
For the Pipe Organ, it's perfect. I connected it up to my guitar amp as the stock speakers aren't quite loud enough for me (that's not to say they're quiet!) but also so I could control bass and treble etc. The Organ doesn't sound like something that's on full crescendo the whole time, playing the lower octaves gives you a softer sound and the higher is more of a bagpipe-Esque noise. I've used some virtual pianos with a Church Organ sound but they always sound too 'twinkly' for me, this does sound like it's being played on actual pipes when loud enough!
The keys are semi-weighted which is excellent, one of the things I was very dissapointed with however was the sustain pedal. It very rarely worked correctly, sometimes requiring me to stand on it with full weight before it would register, other times it would stick on and then not come off again. However, I did purchase a more comprehensive pedal online for around £20, which is more like something you'd see on a real piano, and works very well, so I'm not too concerned about that.
Great for starters
The piano is easy to handle.
Although it has all the features for a beginner, and works mostly fine, some keys might lose some softness during the use.
Pour le mini prix bon produit
Technical Data
- Manufactured by Thomann
- Released in 2017
- Average price : $257
- 88 Lightweighted velocity sensitive keys
- 12 Sounds
- 12 Demo songs
- 32-Voice polyphony
- Layer mode
- Reverb
- Chorus
- Metronome
- Tempo
- Headphone jack
- USB to host - MIDI & Audio, Windows 8 or later, Mac OSX 10.8 or later
- Line Out (L/R)
- Sustain pedal connection
- Optional battery operation (6x LR20 D Mono - not included)
- Speaker system: 2x 20 watts
- Dimensions : 1275mm x 275mm x 85mm
- Height including music stand: 1000 mm
- Weight : 9kg
- Colour: Black
- Includes power supply, sustain pedal and music stand
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