asturian and galician (open/closed) bagpipes

The chanter is available in an Asturian/Galician open/Galician closed version. The chanter can play either an Asturian, a Galician open, or a Galician closed fingering scale. You can very easily change between them if so desired. They all use the same sound samples. (When ordering, please specify which of the three fingerings should be the default at start-up.). The bottom most hole is rotated slightly to the right. (Please specify when ordering if the bottom hole should be rotated to the left.)

Update November 2008: The Galician closed fingering and sound samples can now be exchanged for Great Highland bagpipes fingering and sound. Please specify when ordering.

The chanter is available in black or white.

the package
The bottom most hole rotated to the right.

THE CONTACTS
The contacts on the chanter are electrical and not mechanical, meaning that they do not have to be pressed down to achieve contact. The grip does not have to be any firmer than that on the pipe chanter. The contacts are about 3mm in diameter, and with their highest point slightly above the surface of the pipe in order to get a better feel for their position. Worth mentioning is that there is no electrical "ground contact" on which a finger or any other part of the body has to rest on, or be connected to, whilst playing.

PLAYING
You start the drones and chanter by placing your lower hand thumb on the contact on the back. If you don't want the drones to sound you need to turn the drone volume down to zero. If you want to shut the sound off briefly, just let go off the lower hand thumb contact and it will go silent until you start playing again.

SETTINGS/CONTROLS
There are two contacts that are used to control all settings. To adjust a setting, just hold the relevant fingering combination and use the control contacts.

The following can be controlled: MIDI
MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) is an electronic communications protocol that enables electronic musical instruments, computers, and synthezises etc. to communicate with each other. MIDI does not transmit an audio signal - it transmits digital data messages defining parameters such as pitch and volume of the musical notes to play. See http://www.midi.org for further reading.

You enter MIDI mode by holding a specific fingering combination and then inserting the MIDI cable plug to switch the chanter on.
The chanter is initially set to channel 1, but can be set between 1 and 14. The bass is fixed on channel 15 and the tenor fixed on channel 16.
In MIDI mode the metronome and recording are not available.
The pitch is adjusted in semi-notes.
The volume settings for chanter and drones affect the "velocity" of the MIDI note. On some devices the velocity is the same as the volume for the note, on others it isn't. It is up to the receiving device to interpret the velocity data.
In MIDI mode the power consumption is lower and the chanter will run for approx. 20 hours on a rechargeable 1000mAh NiMH battery.

DIMENSIONS
The length of the pipe is 249mm and the diameter is 16mm. The dimensions together with the low weight of approx. 60 grams, make this chanter very portable indeed.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
The manual: Fingering charts: SOUND SAMPLE