Akai S700 (1987)

12-bit rackmount MIDI sampler with 6-voice polyphony, built-in QuickDisk drive, and expandable memory, made in Japan.

Overview

The Akai S700 MIDI Digital Sampler is a 12-bit rackmount sampler released in 1987 as the rack version of the X7000 keyboard sampler. Made in Japan, it was part of Akai's follow-up to the S612 and a smaller sibling to the S900, marking the beginning of Akai's tradition of S-prefixed beige samplers. It supports mono sampling at up to 40kHz and features 6 standard voices, expandable to 16 with the optional ASK70 flash memory board. The unit has a user-friendly interface with 19 buttons, a data wheel, and a 16-character backlit LCD, and includes dedicated mic- and line-level inputs, MIDI In/Out/Thru, and a 13-pin DIN socket for six independent voice outputs.

Specifications

Bit Depth12-bit linear
SamplingMono
Maximum Sampling Frequency40kHz
Polyphony6 voices (16 with ASK70 expansion)
Sample Memory128 KB (expandable to 256 KB)
Storage MediaQuickDisk (2.8-inch)
Rack Size2U, 19-inch rackmount
WeightSeven kilograms
OutputsLine-out, 13-pin DIN multi-voice output
MIDIIn, Out, Thru
FilterLow-pass with velocity-modulated cutoff, no resonance
LFOSine wave with speed, depth, and delay controls
LoopingIncludes 'alternate' looping
EditingTrim, re-sample, overdub

Design

The S700 boots its operating system from ROM and uses non-dynamically allocated memory, with each of the six samples limited to one sixth of total RAM. It features a fixed-waveform LFO (sine), a velocity-sensitive low-pass filter, and release-time envelope control mappable to key velocity. The architecture favors short percussion samples unless bandwidth is reduced to extend sample length. The unit includes a built-in QuickDisk drive for sample storage and can load S612-formatted disks. The S700/X7000 series are light grey/white in color and include three knobs for recording, monitoring, and master volume.

Context

Introduced in 1987, the S700 followed the S612 and S900, serving as a more capable successor with six simultaneous samples, a built-in disk drive, and support for individual voice outputs. It offered near professional-quality sampling at a reasonable price and was praised for its bomb-proof design and warm, lo-fi 12-bit character, especially for drums and analog-style sounds. Unlike the S612, it allowed multisample playback and expansion via the ASK70 board.

Market

The QuickDisk drive is known to be unreliable and often requires belt replacement; QuickDisks are now hard to find. Common issues include failed drive belts and sampling input problems. Maintenance requires specific ICs (BA6110, D41464C-12, PC900) and power cords. Market value remains low due to limited memory, obsolete storage, and reliability concerns.

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