Thanks.
Normal situation is that once writing to all free locations once, there are a lot of intermediate saves made. A just a few keepers.
So when writing over you want to check by listening first, and do compare thingy, this is a keeper or not.
So from manual it seems so many unnecessary operations, as I read it.
With Nordlead, you press store once and immediately listen to current as stored before keeping edit buffer.
You just browse and listening to as many presets as you want and just decide you will overwrite this one you are listening to - and press Store again. Done.
Polybrute is similar, hold Write and press any matrix button in this or another page and you start listening to that location. Just press the next, the next and so forth and when feel like nothing interesting there - you press ok to overwrite, press ok again unless you want to change category of the preset.
For Prophet 6 I read it as
- first exit compare once you found something to overwrite, by pressing global again
- then again navigate to the bank+preset you just left in compare mode.
- press write to finalize.
You have to repeat the navigating process twice for every save, or am I misreading this?
Most of the time it's very small differences editing, and make plenty intermediate saves. Then go back and edit those I still find interesting and go in another direction, kind of. So memory is scattered very soon with keepers and those I will overwrite.
Just the way I enjoy the most doing exploration of what a synth offer.
The way Nordlead and Polybrute do preview before overwriting is so smooth, with minimum keypresses.
Once you listen to one location you will overwrite, you just execute the write.