The mini, obviously the more portable of the bunch, delivers a particularly small set of 25 springy keys with very little throw (in my experience), the mid-tier option takes it up to 37 keys, and the pro variant trades out the miniature keys for 25 “full-size” synth action pushers. They don’t have the drum pads you’ll find from AKAI above (that’s what its iRig Pads MIDI groove controller is for), but they do provide the most important elements of a MIDI keyboard controller otherwise and are also available in three different models. The iRig Keys 2 lineup on display here delivers “improved compatibility for the latest mobile devices, full MIDI input and output, and multiple power options” as well as a suite of added assignable control knobs and your usual octave switchers, pitch bend wheel, and modulation wheel.
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