Casio Keyboard Wk 200

Overall, the Casio WK-200 is an excellent keyboard for the price. Beginner pianists can take advantage of its built-in exercises, which can help build a relationship the piano keyboard layout; while more experienced players will find the 76 touch-sensitive keys useful when playing a piece of music with a broad range.

Casio wk 220 keyboard review

Features

  • Keys: 76
  • Polyphony: 48-note; 24 for some voices
  • Touch Sensitivity: 2 velocity settings, or off
  • Reverb/Chorus: 10 reverb settings; 5 chorus
  • Metronome: Yes; 30-255 beats per minute (BPM)

Electronic Keyboard; WK-200; Casio WK-200 Manuals Manuals and User Guides for Casio WK-200. We have 5 Casio WK-200 manuals available for free PDF download: User Manual, Appendix. Casio WK-200 User Manual (154 pages) Brand: Casio. WK Series When 61 keys is not enough, look no further than Casio’s WK-series keyboards. They provide all the fun and exciting music-making capabilities of the CTK-series, but with 76 piano-style keys to make sure you never miss a note. Play notes on the keyboard using the sampled sound! If you sample the 'Ting!' Sound of a triangle, for example, you can then play notes with the sound on the keyboard. You even can add reverb, vibrato, and other effects to the sampled sound. Incorporate a sampled sound into accompaniment patterns! About CASIO: WK-200. Touch Response let's you add delicate nuances to notes by varying how much pressure you apply to keyboard keys.

The Casio WK-200 is an affordable instrument with a 76 Key Piano Style Touch Sensitive Keyboard, 570 total onboard Tones, 180 Rhythms and Reverb plus Chorus Digital Effects. Packed with great features such as Casio's famous Step-up Lesson System, audio inputs for a MP3 player, Mic input, 10 seconds of sampling and a USB port for MIDI.

Pros

Cons

Keys & Action

Voices & Tones

Pedal Functions

Preset Songs

Keyboard Speakers & Quality

Casio keyboard wk 200 manual

Included Accessories

Casio Wk 200 Review

*The touch-sensitivity on the WK-200 is dependent on how quickly a note is pressed, which is not only measured in how hard you touch the key—a method that can be confusing for ear-hand coordination and one that may hinder the development of more refined dynamic techniques on the piano.