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Disabling touch sensitivity on a vintage Fatar

Months ago when I was putting together my home studio, I came across a vintage (‘80s or ‘90s) Fatar SR1 TB49 midi keyboard sitting around in my mother in law’s closet. She let me have it so I was happy about not needing to buy a keyboard. It’s a simple controller with a really great key bed and only has a 5-pin midi out, a power adapter plug-in, and a power button. So I resurrected it by purchasing a power adapter with the proper polarity as well as a midi-usb cord, the iConnectivity Mio. It worked instantly and beautifully with zero latency plugged into my usbc iPad through a 7in1 hub, along with my interface and other devices. The issue I’m having is that is seems the touch sensitivity is baked into the Fatar, and no matter what settings I adjust in Auria Pro, CB3, GarageBand, and others, I can’t seem to disable it. The sensitivity is also quite extreme without much subtlety, going from mellow soft to aggressively loud with nothing in between. It happens while recording piano and drums and everything else. My guesses as to why are that maybe since there’s only midi out but not midi in the Fatar isn’t receiving the information from DAW settings, or maybe it’s because back in the day it came with a CD-Rom companion and driver but I’m using it plug-and-play? The tasks of manually editing the velocity of each note or recording without any velocity and adding later to taste both seem tedious, it should operate more organically. Any advice? Thanks!

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