Ошибка 25001 при установке драйвера yamaha

Before you do anything else, you’ll want to completely uninstall the driver. Go to the Apps page of your Settings and wait a minute or so for the list of installed apps to be populated, then scroll down until you see the Yamaha driver listed, click on it, and select uninstall. (I’m not in front of my Windows computer right now so I’m going by memory. If you have trouble finding it, I’ll look on my computer so I can give more specific detailed instructions.)

Are you sure it’s a DGX-600, or did you mean to type DGX-660? There’s no DGX-600 listed on Yamaha’s web site. It doesn’t matter as far as which version of the driver to use, but I wanted to check whether it has MIDI DIN ports or only a USB TO HOST port.

If it’s actually a DGX-660, you might not even need to use a driver with it, because it should be class compliant. What software are you trying to use with it? Does it show up as an available MIDI device even without installing a driver? (It will most likely be listed as “Digital Keyboard,” “Digital Piano,” or something like that, rather than as the specific model number.) If it does show up, you don’t need to worry about installing the driver— although you can still install it if you wish.

Even if the keyboard doesn’t show up as an available MIDI device with no driver installed, it should at least show up in your Windows system (under Devices) as an unknown USB device. If it isn’t showing up at all, then the next step is to verify that you’re using the correct type of USB connection.

You MUST use a USB 2 cable, NOT a USB 3 cable. I think you can tell them apart based on the color inside the connector— I think USB 3 cables and ports usually have blue parts inside their connectors. (If you aren’t sure what to look for, search for “how to identify usb 3.”) It is probably also best to plug the USB 2 cable into a USB 2 port, rather than into a USB 3 port— but if your computer doesn’t have a USB 2 port, then at least be certain to use a USB 2 cable. If it turns out that you’ve been trying to use a USB 3 cable, then that’s most likely the problem right there, and switching to a USB 2 cable may resolve the connection issue.

By the way, you also want to make sure you’re using a good USB cable, because the wires inside of a cable can get broken, especially if you’ve been winding and unwinding the cable a lot when putting it away and getting it back out. Try using the cable with some other device to verify that it’s working properly.

If you do need or want to install the Yamaha USB-MIDI driver, then first make sure you’ve uninstalled the failed installation. Furthermore, before you try to reinstall the driver you must make sure the keyboard is connected to your computer, is turned on, and is detected as a USB device.

The version of the driver that you choose— 32 or 64 bits— must match your operating system, so if you have a 64-bit OS then you must use the 64-bit driver.

You want to use the newest version for Windows 10, since that’s the version of Windows you have. (An older Windows 10 version might also work, but the newest version is always best in case there were any fixes that might have an impact.)

Install the driver while the keyboard is connected and turned on, and the driver should be able to find it.

If these suggestions don’t help, please let us know so we can take it from there.

Купил цифровое пианино, долго сомневался по поводу USB to HOST и что данное пианино можно подключить к фрути лупс как midi клавиатуру. В комплекте нет USB шнура, поэтому я использовал ДВУХМЕТРОВЫЙ шнур от принтера, при подключении к компьютеру, была выдана ошибка «устройство работает не правильно», при попытке поставить драйвер, вылезла такая ошибка error 25001 no device is connected, способов решающих эту проблему я не нашёл в интернете, хотя иногда мелькал совет использовать короткий USB шнур. В отчаянии я так и сделал и о чудо, драйвера стали и fl studio увидела моё пиано.

В итоге купил качественный метровый позолоченнй шнур. И всё заработало.

Купите мне чашечку кофе, если статья оказалась полезной.

Before you do anything else, you’ll want to completely uninstall the driver. Go to the Apps page of your Settings and wait a minute or so for the list of installed apps to be populated, then scroll down until you see the Yamaha driver listed, click on it, and select uninstall. (I’m not in front of my Windows computer right now so I’m going by memory. If you have trouble finding it, I’ll look on my computer so I can give more specific detailed instructions.)

Are you sure it’s a DGX-600, or did you mean to type DGX-660? There’s no DGX-600 listed on Yamaha’s web site. It doesn’t matter as far as which version of the driver to use, but I wanted to check whether it has MIDI DIN ports or only a USB TO HOST port.

If it’s actually a DGX-660, you might not even need to use a driver with it, because it should be class compliant. What software are you trying to use with it? Does it show up as an available MIDI device even without installing a driver? (It will most likely be listed as “Digital Keyboard,” “Digital Piano,” or something like that, rather than as the specific model number.) If it does show up, you don’t need to worry about installing the driver— although you can still install it if you wish.

Even if the keyboard doesn’t show up as an available MIDI device with no driver installed, it should at least show up in your Windows system (under Devices) as an unknown USB device. If it isn’t showing up at all, then the next step is to verify that you’re using the correct type of USB connection.

You MUST use a USB 2 cable, NOT a USB 3 cable. I think you can tell them apart based on the color inside the connector— I think USB 3 cables and ports usually have blue parts inside their connectors. (If you aren’t sure what to look for, search for “how to identify usb 3.”) It is probably also best to plug the USB 2 cable into a USB 2 port, rather than into a USB 3 port— but if your computer doesn’t have a USB 2 port, then at least be certain to use a USB 2 cable. If it turns out that you’ve been trying to use a USB 3 cable, then that’s most likely the problem right there, and switching to a USB 2 cable may resolve the connection issue.

By the way, you also want to make sure you’re using a good USB cable, because the wires inside of a cable can get broken, especially if you’ve been winding and unwinding the cable a lot when putting it away and getting it back out. Try using the cable with some other device to verify that it’s working properly.

If you do need or want to install the Yamaha USB-MIDI driver, then first make sure you’ve uninstalled the failed installation. Furthermore, before you try to reinstall the driver you must make sure the keyboard is connected to your computer, is turned on, and is detected as a USB device.

The version of the driver that you choose— 32 or 64 bits— must match your operating system, so if you have a 64-bit OS then you must use the 64-bit driver.

You want to use the newest version for Windows 10, since that’s the version of Windows you have. (An older Windows 10 version might also work, but the newest version is always best in case there were any fixes that might have an impact.)

Install the driver while the keyboard is connected and turned on, and the driver should be able to find it.

If these suggestions don’t help, please let us know so we can take it from there.

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  1. Yamaha USB-MIDI driver fails during installation (error code 25001 Device Not Connected)
  2. Gabriel_aa
  3. Advertisements
  4. SeaGtGruff
  5. martin_madness
  6. SeaGtGruff
  7. Yamaha USB-MIDI driver fails during installation (error code 25001 Device Not Connected)
  8. Kevin Wilamowski
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  10. Biggles
  11. SeaGtGruff
  12. Yamaha USB audio driver not installing (Device not connected)
  13. viswagoku
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  15. The Y_man
  16. viswagoku
  17. happyrat1
  18. viswagoku
  19. happyrat1
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  21. viswagoku
  22. viswagoku
  23. b3maniac
  24. Vivien
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  27. viswagoku
  28. happyrat1
  29. Ted Nicoson
  30. ThomasM
  31. keyboard-all
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  33. SeaGtGruff
  34. viswagoku
  35. Ted Nicoson

Yamaha USB-MIDI driver fails during installation (error code 25001 Device Not Connected)

Gabriel_aa

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SeaGtGruff

I meant to play that note!

The Yamaha USB-MIDI driver won’t install unless the installation program can detect that a compatible Yamaha keyboard is connected to the computer and is turned on.

Also, there are— and have been— different versions of the Yamaha USB-MIDI driver, and the driver won’t install if it’s not the correct version for your computer’s operating system. What operating system is it (Windows, macOS, etc.), what version is it (e.g., Windows 7, 8, 8.1, or 10), and how many bits is it for (32 or 64)?

Note that if there was a CD-ROM that came with your keyboard and it has a USB-MIDI driver on it, it might not be the correct version for your computer’s operating system, especially if it’s an older keyboard model. It’s always best to go to Yamaha’s website and make sure you download the latest version of the USB-MIDI driver that’s compatible with your OS.

martin_madness

SeaGtGruff

I meant to play that note!

Are you using Windows on the Mac for a specific reason? I’m thinking you might want to see if you can get things working in the macOS first, and once you’ve done that you can try getting things working in Windows on the Mac. I’m primarily a Windows user, myself, and you should be able to get things working in Windows, but running one OS inside another adds another layer of complexity for things to go wrong with— if you’re running Windows on a virtual machine. Or do you have the Mac set up so you can boot up in Windows if you want?

If you’re using a MIDI-to-USB cable, rather than a standard USB cable, then either you shouldn’t need a driver, or you should use the driver provided by the manufacturer of the cable— not the driver from the manufacturer of the keyboard. What brand is the cable? I’ve read that some MIDI-to-USB cables can be problematic as far as data errors, so if the computer is receiving MIDI data then you might want to use a MIDI monitor on the computer to make sure the data looks okay.

By the way, one very common mistake when using MIDI cables is that IN should go to OUT, and OUT should go to IN, which seems contrary to what you might expect. That’s because the keyboard’s MIDI OUTput will be the computer’s MIDI INput, and the computer’s MIDI OUTput will be the keyboard’s MIDI INput. So if you’re using a MIDI-to-USB cable, the two MIDI plugs on the cable will be labeled IN and OUT, but you want to connect the IN cable to the keyboard’s MIDI OUT port, and connect the OUT cable to the keyboard’s MIDI IN port.

Doesn’t the CLP-430 have a USB-to-Host connector in addition to its MIDI IN/OUT connectors? If you have trouble getting a MIDI-to-USB connection to work, you might consider going the straight USB route. However, you should check the CLP-430’s manual to see what it says about USB cables. I believe you need to use a USB 2 cable, not a USB 3 cable, and you should make sure the cable isn’t too long. If you do use a straight USB connection, you’ll need to install the Yamaha USB-MIDI driver for Windows if you’re using Windows, but if you’re using the macOS then I don’t think you need to install a driver because the macOS should have suitable built-in drivers. However, this is where things could be confusing, because the version of the Mac’s OS may be relevant. What is the OS version that’s installed on the Mac?

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Yamaha USB-MIDI driver fails during installation (error code 25001 Device Not Connected)

Kevin Wilamowski

I just purchased a Yamaha DGX600 but I cannot use the MIDI capabilities because the driver fails during installation. Searching online. I see this error code has been showing up for several years. Is there a working driver out there that anyone knows of? I’ve contacted Yamaha customer support twice and both times the people I chatted with had no clue what the problem was and told me someone would call me. That was a week ago and I haven’t heard anything. Help!

PS- I’m running Windows 10. Also, the drivers come in 32 and 64 bit flavors and neither works (the 64 is the one that should be installed).

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Biggles

Is the driver page that comes up for me.

Downloading the driver and installing it before connecting the DGX would be the normal process, then when connecting the keyboard you may need to point Windows to the location where the Diver has been installed.

But what I would try is to download the driver and place it in a newfolder called DGX660 on your C drive, then go into Control Panel and call up Device Manager, ID the DGX and then open Properties, Driver and choose Update. Then select Manual install and pointit at the DGX folder, the driver should then install.

If it does not work with the 64bit version try the 32bit.

If it does not come back and we will advise another process.

SeaGtGruff

I meant to play that note!

Before you do anything else, you’ll want to completely uninstall the driver. Go to the Apps page of your Settings and wait a minute or so for the list of installed apps to be populated, then scroll down until you see the Yamaha driver listed, click on it, and select uninstall. (I’m not in front of my Windows computer right now so I’m going by memory. If you have trouble finding it, I’ll look on my computer so I can give more specific detailed instructions.)

Are you sure it’s a DGX-600, or did you mean to type DGX-660? There’s no DGX-600 listed on Yamaha’s web site. It doesn’t matter as far as which version of the driver to use, but I wanted to check whether it has MIDI DIN ports or only a USB TO HOST port.

If it’s actually a DGX-660, you might not even need to use a driver with it, because it should be class compliant. What software are you trying to use with it? Does it show up as an available MIDI device even without installing a driver? (It will most likely be listed as “Digital Keyboard,” “Digital Piano,” or something like that, rather than as the specific model number.) If it does show up, you don’t need to worry about installing the driver— although you can still install it if you wish.

Even if the keyboard doesn’t show up as an available MIDI device with no driver installed, it should at least show up in your Windows system (under Devices) as an unknown USB device. If it isn’t showing up at all, then the next step is to verify that you’re using the correct type of USB connection.

You MUST use a USB 2 cable, NOT a USB 3 cable. I think you can tell them apart based on the color inside the connector— I think USB 3 cables and ports usually have blue parts inside their connectors. (If you aren’t sure what to look for, search for “how to identify usb 3.”) It is probably also best to plug the USB 2 cable into a USB 2 port, rather than into a USB 3 port— but if your computer doesn’t have a USB 2 port, then at least be certain to use a USB 2 cable. If it turns out that you’ve been trying to use a USB 3 cable, then that’s most likely the problem right there, and switching to a USB 2 cable may resolve the connection issue.

By the way, you also want to make sure you’re using a good USB cable, because the wires inside of a cable can get broken, especially if you’ve been winding and unwinding the cable a lot when putting it away and getting it back out. Try using the cable with some other device to verify that it’s working properly.

If you do need or want to install the Yamaha USB-MIDI driver, then first make sure you’ve uninstalled the failed installation. Furthermore, before you try to reinstall the driver you must make sure the keyboard is connected to your computer, is turned on, and is detected as a USB device.

The version of the driver that you choose— 32 or 64 bits— must match your operating system, so if you have a 64-bit OS then you must use the 64-bit driver.

You want to use the newest version for Windows 10, since that’s the version of Windows you have. (An older Windows 10 version might also work, but the newest version is always best in case there were any fixes that might have an impact.)

Install the driver while the keyboard is connected and turned on, and the driver should be able to find it.

If these suggestions don’t help, please let us know so we can take it from there.

Источник

Yamaha USB audio driver not installing (Device not connected)

viswagoku

Hey guyz, I am new to this forums. I need help

I have a Yamaha PSR-S710 keyboard. I need to connect it to my laptop via USB. But i cant install the USB audio driver.

Laptop : Dell XPS 15, Windows 8, 6 GB ram, i5 etc.

When i install the driver it says «error 25001 no device connected».. what shall i do?

Please help guys.
reply here or on IM(s) Gmail : (e-mail address removed)
Yahoo : (e-mail address removed)
Facebook : www.facebook.com/viswagoku
Skype : viswagoku

need help urgently..

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The Y_man

Windows 8. is the driver compatible?

viswagoku

happyrat1

Destroyer of Eardrums.

Take a look at this link.

Yamaha doesn’t have a driver for Windows 8 yet.

You’re just going to have to wait and pray they support your keyboard with a Win 8 driver.

It also wouldn’t hurt to fire off an email to their tech support and demand that they write one.

For the time being though, you are SOL.

viswagoku

bro, i tried this on windows 7 i thought it was os problem. so when windows 8 released i formatted full but still same error

I just wanna record keyboard audio with pc. pen drive is shit.. :/

happyrat1

Destroyer of Eardrums.

I’d still say your best bet is to fire off some emails to Yamaha Tech Support and get your answers direct from the horse’s mouth. Win 8 is such a new OS nobody here will be able to answer you one way or the other.

It could also be a 64 Bit/32 Bit problem. You didn’t mention that you were running 64 Bit windows but with those specs I’ll assume you are. Plenty of times vendors release 32 bit only drivers with no 64 bit support.

I repeat. Ask Yamaha. They wrote the driver.

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viswagoku

viswagoku

b3maniac

Vivien

I have the same problem
Computer: Dell Inspiron 660 desktop, windows 8 64-bit, 6 ram.
Keyboard: Yamaha PSR-e323, with a e-mu 1x1tab interface

I have installed the emu driver and the yamaha musicsoft downloader, but I get error 25001, no device connected when I try to install the yamaha driver, which is by the way now compatible with windows 8 64 bit.

The computer itself doesn’t recognise my keboard either, cause when I connect it, the new hardware found message doesn’t show. I’ve got my midi cables plugged in the right way.

I don’t think that windows 8 is the cause, because I’ve had the exact same problem before with my vista 32-bit

Please help, you can email me on v(e-mail address removed)

viswagoku

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viswagoku

happyrat1

Destroyer of Eardrums.

According to the manual

Pages 95 and 96 it seems to be for connecting the keyboard to your computer and the Internet. Whether that’s Audio and/or MIDI or only one or the other I’m not certain.

Anyway, here’s their download page where you can download the drivers, manuals and lots of other goodies for the PSR-S710

Ted Nicoson

Not sure where you came up with a USB AUDIO driver. If it was on a CD that came with the S710, then it is probably a «one-size-fits-all» CD that contains all the drivers for all the different Yamaha keyboards. If you go to the S710 Support site, you will see ONLY USB MIDI drivers, NOT USB AUDIO drivers listed for download. The S710/910 do not support audio over USB. You can find the S710 Support site here:

ThomasM

keyboard-all

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SeaGtGruff

I meant to play that note!

I ran into this problem with an older Yamaha I bought used several months ago— the YPT-400. I’m on 64-bit Windows 8.1 computers (desktop and laptop), and the latest driver from Yamaha works perfectly with my PSR-E433 and PSR-E443, but with my YPT-400 I get something like «no device present» or «no compatible driver found,» depending on where I’m looking. It seems the YPT-400 doesn’t work with a 64-bit driver. I concluded that it might be a 32-bit/64-bit issue, but I haven’t tried to install the 32-bit driver yet.

On the other hand, my YPT-400 works perfectly with my iPad without needing a driver!

viswagoku

Ted Nicoson

Save your energy and frustration trying to install 32 bit drivers on a 64 bit operating system. You may want to peruse this article from Microsoft:

particularly the statement:

«A computer running a 64-bit version of Windows needs a 64-bit driver for every piece of hardware installed in it or connected to it. For example, if you’re trying to install a video card (graphics card), printer, or other device that only has 32-bit drivers available, it won’t install on a 64-bit version of Windows.»

In other words, the bit depth of the driver must match the bit depth of the operating system or it will not install, and «Compatibility Mode» applies to programs, not drivers. Many of us learned this the hard way some years ago with the advent of Vista-64, when our favorite old hardware would no longer work. Sadly, Vista, itself, took the bad rap, but the problem was not Vista, but the 64 bit driver requirements. Those who migrated from XP to Vista-32 did not experience those problems. The 32/32 and 64/64 driver requirement match have carried over into Win-7 and Win-8. There are those who believe that they have installed 32 bit drivers on 64 bit Windows, but what they have actually encountered is a dual mode installer which automatically detects the type of operating system and installs the appropriate driver(s).

When I migrated from a Vista-32 desktop to a Vista-64 machine, I immediately lost USB-MIDI communications with my Casio WK-3800, because Casio refused to write a 64 bit driver for it. I found a work around by kludging a 64 bit Edirol sound module driver to work with it, but several years later, when Casio released its 64 bit Win-7 driver, the WK-3800 worked fine with it on Vista-64, even though Casio still does not recognize it. This indicates that it is not so much the version of Windows, but rather, the type (32/64) of driver that makes the difference. It also shows Casio’s continuing lack of understanding about Vista-64.

As a side note, old 16 bit Windows 3.X programs will not install/run on 64 bit systems — not even in Compatibility Mode. There isn’t even a Compatibility Mode choice for them. The real foolers here are the programs that touted being Win-95 and Win-98 compatible, when they were just old 16 bit Win 3.X programs that would run on those operating systems (as wells as on 32 bit XP and Vista), but not on the 64 bit systems.

Exactly my point ! Here we are three years later, and we are still having these 32 versus 64 bit discussions, so there is apparently still a lot of misinformation about this topic. In a way, I am glad that keyboard-all drug it back into the limelight.

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Topic: PSR-E363 not installing USB MIDI driver Error 25001  (Read 27112 times)

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guiboos

Hello,
I�ve just bought my PSR-E363 a week ago. I have 2 notebooks with Windows 10 (64-bit) latest update, one MACBOOOK and 2 cables USB available. I�ve mada all suggested steps (only the Yamaha-PC cable plugged, and then Turn ON Yamaha PSR-E3636). It detects DIGITAL KEYBOARD at Windows DEVCICE MANAGER. When I run the USB-MIDI Driver V3.1.4 for Win 10/8.1/8/7 SP1 (64-bit) (latest version) it stops with the Error 25001 — (no device (hardware) found. Then I�ve installed the Yamaha Steinberg USB Driver and It appears at the SOUND (CONTROL PANEL) as both playing and recording tabs. But I just can�t install the USB -MIDI driver. I�ve tried all combinations of cables and notebooks. The MACBOOK installs the driver but not detects the YAMAHA KEYBOARD as MIDI device. Then I went to the store I�ve bought it and took my notebook and cables to test other YAMAHA KEYBOARDS (E463 and another E363) with the same results I�ve got at home. What am I doing wrong?


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yado70


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I think that with the PSR-E453/PSR-EW400 as well as the PSR-E363/PSR-EW300/YPT-360 you’re supposed to install the Steinberg USB driver, and only that driver, not the Yamaha USB driver. I think the Steinberg driver is for both USB-audio and USB-MIDI, while the Yamaha driver is for USB-MIDI only. The PSR-E363’s USB connection carries audio and MIDI data simultaneously, and the driver needs to be able to understand the data coming through the USB connection. I don’t think the Yamaha driver can understand the combined audio and MIDI data— it isn’t programmed to pick out the MIDI data and ignore the audio data— which is why it can’t detect the keyboard as you’re expecting. So you need the Steinberg driver, which is programmed to handle both types of data.

Likewise, if the situation were reversed and you were trying to install the Steinberg driver with a Yamaha keyboard that has USB-MIDI but not USB-audio, I think you would also get an error, because the Steinberg driver is programmed to expect both types of data in the USB signal and would not be able to handle the lack of audio data in the USB signal.


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


guiboos

Hi,
I just couln’t install that MIDI mapper You’ve said, yado70. I’ve put the PLWMidiMap.cpl file at c:windowssystem32 and the Control Panel didn’t recognized it.

Thanks for you reply, SeaGtGruff. Is there any other means to test MIDI?


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You shouldn’t need a MIDI mapper with Windows 10. But if you just want to check whether the computer is receiving MIDI data, or would like to monitor its MIDI data, there’s a little utility program called «MIDI-OX» that lets you monitor MIDI data, or route MIDI data from one MIDI port to another, and other functions.


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


Yudaasta

Hii, i have the same problem during installation driver. Did you find the solution for this problem? My keyboard psr e363 also. Need your help. Thank you


Logged


I have a PSR-EW400, which uses the same USB-Audio/MIDI driver as the PSR-E363— and, like the PSR-E363, it’s USB-MIDI class-compliant, so it shouldn’t need a driver.

When I connected my PSR-EW400 to my computer for the first time (just a moment ago), Windows said it was setting up the DIGITAL KEYBOARD device. Then it said DIGITAL KEYBOARD is ready to use. I started up my main DAW (Acoustica Mixcraft), and DIGITAL KEYBOARD shows up as an external instrument. I was able to create a simple 1-bar loop, complete with Bank/Program messages, and sequence it to the keyboard, no problem. I did not need to install a driver at all. So for a MIDI connection you don’t need to install the driver.

I haven’t tried to see if I can record the audio over the USB connection without installing the driver, but will try it next.


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


Okay, the computer wouldn’t see the PSR-EW400 as an audio device without the driver installed.

I installed the latest version of the driver— https://usa.yamaha.com/support/updates/yamaha_steinberg_usb_driver_for_win.html— but I didn’t follow the installation instructions exactly; in particular, I did not turn off my computer first as requested in the instructions.

— I turned off my PSR-EW400.

— I unplugged the USB cable from my computer. (I prefer to leave the USB cable plugged into the back of my PSR-EW400 to minimize the number of times I plug in and unplug the cable, to avoid any unnecessary «wear and tear» on the port.)

— I installed the driver. At first the installation acted like it wasn’t doing anything— the progress indicator didn’t even start moving for a while— but once it finally got going it installed quickly.

— After the installation was over, I reconnected the USB cable to the computer.

— I turned on the PSR-EW400.

— I started my DAW again and verified that DIGITAL KEYBOARD-1 showed up as a MIDI device. (Interestingly enough, it was listed as just DIGITAL KEYBOARD, without the «-1» on the end, when I was using it as a class-compliant USB-MIDI device before installing the driver.)

— I verified that DIGITAL KEYBOARD was showing up as an audio device as well. (I forget the exact wording, but I believe it said «Line» in there somewhere.) I armed an audio track and was able to record myself playing the keyboard.

— When I played back the recorded audio track, it would not play through my computer’s speakers, although I think that was something to do with Steam (the video game platform), because Mixcraft said that my default audio devices were Steam something-or-other. But when I went into Mixcraft preferences and went to the audio setup, I was able to select DIGITAL KEYBOARD as the default audio input device and audio output device. Then I was able to play back the recorded audio track and hear it through my keyboard.


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


By the way, I notice that Yamaha’s USA site is listing the standard USB-MIDI driver for the PSR-EW410, which is definitely the wrong driver for it. I don’t see any driver listed for the PSR-E363, but you need the Yamaha Steinberg driver, version 1.10.0— the one I linked to in my previous post— not Yamaha’s standard driver which is currently at version 3.1.4. The standard driver will not work, because it will not be able to understand the USB-audio portion of the data, which is why it won’t recognize the PSR-E363. As long as you use the correct driver, it should work.

However, I should also mention that you need to use USB 2, not USB 3. If your computer or laptop doesn’t have a USB 2 port, try at least using a USB 2 cable, as the manual specifically says that you should not use a USB 3 cable.


Logged

Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


hsatrio

Hi.

 I have a similar problem here.

I have PSR E363, trying to connect to windows 10 64 bit but failed.
I already download the updated usb driver (um314164), I cannot install the driver because of error 25005. What does error 25005 mean?

this problem appear when I uninstall all of my usb port driver because of another problem and after that I failed to install the usb midi driver.

I already install steinberg usb driver (YSUSB_V1100_Win) that you suggested earlier but it doesn’t work too.

My device manager detected digital keyboard but with [!] sign, so in my understanding it must be driver problem.

When the digital keyboard usb success to install before the problem, my PSR is detected in Ableton perfectly.

please help me  :'(

« Last Edit: February 25, 2018, 02:36:24 PM by hsatrio »


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I can’t find any specific information on the web about error 25005, because it could mean different things in different programs, but the general meaning seems to be— as panos suggested— that the installation wasn’t successful. The specifics of why it wasn’t successful is the part that could vary depending on the program.

However, as I’ve said before, the USB-MIDI driver that you’re trying to install is the wrong one. Apparently it can’t detect the PSR-E363 correctly, probably due to the fact that the PSR-E363’s USB signal carries audio information as well as MIDI information, so the data doesn’t have the expected format. And if the installation program can’t find an attached keyboard that it understands, the installation will fail.

But you don’t need to install that driver for the PSR-E363, and you shouldn’t try to install it.

Here’s what I recommend:

(1) Click on the Notifications icon— the square caption icon on the right side of the task bar— and when the notifications panel slides into view from the right side of the screen, click on the «All settings» option.

(2) In the «Settings» window, click on the «Apps» option, then be patient as Windows populates the «Apps & features» list, which might take a few minutes if you have a lot of programs installed.

(3) Scroll down to the bottom of the list and look for any programs that start with «Yamaha.» If you see «Yamaha USB-MIDI Driver» listed, click on it so you get the «Modify» and «Uninstall» buttons, then click on the «Uninstall» button.

(4) If prompted to do so, restart Windows, then repeat steps 1 and 2. Then scroll down and see if «Yamaha Steinberg USB Driver» is listed. If it is, click on it, then click on the «Uninstall» button.

Note that you should not need to install the Yamaha Steinberg USB Driver at all unless you want to use the PSR-E363’s USB-audio, because its USB-MIDI should work without needing to install that driver.

If you do want to use the USB-audio, disconnect the PSR-E363 from the computer before you try to install the Yamaha Steinberg USB Driver. Then install that driver, reconnect the PSR-E363 to the computer, and see if it works as it should in your DAW.


Logged

Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


hsatrio

Thank you all for the quick replay. I really appreciate it.

right now, I already install asio4all from the beginning, I use focusrite scarlett solo and I use Ableton for my DAW software.

I already uninstall the two USB driver (steinberg and yamaha) but Ableton still cannot detect my PSR.
I was succeeded to connect my PSR to Ableton before, I’m bit confused why Ableton cannot detect my PSR right now.

If the PSR is succeeded to connect, Ableton gave a signal in the right corner of the apps when you push any button. In my case, Ableton didn’t give a signal at all.

Also, Ableton does not provide digital keyboard option on link midi preferences and in device manager the digital keyboard gave me sign [?].

did you know what is wrong with my keyboard or computer?

My usb hub is working fine for another device.

I really confuse  :'(


Logged


If you’re trying to use your PSR-E363 with a USB hub, it most likely will not work. I believe the manual says that you cannot connect the PSR-E363 to a USB hub, that it must be connected directly to a USB port on the computer.

Are you connecting the PSR-E363 to the Focusrite? I don’t think that will work, either— unless you’re connecting only the keyboard’s audio out to the Focusrite. But if you connect the PSR-E363 directly to the computer, you should be able to use the PSR-E363’s USB audio rather than needing to go through an audio interface.


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


hsatrio

No, I didn’t connect my PSR to Focusrite and I connect my PSR directly from USB Port and still cannot detect any signal.

I cannot connect to Yamaha apps too

Is it my problem is my usb port?

« Last Edit: February 25, 2018, 11:35:00 PM by hsatrio »


Logged


Maybe you could download a free program that connects with midi keyboards like synthesia or something, to see if your computer can indentify your psr at least as a midi keyboard.


Logged


this problem appear when I uninstall all of my usb port driver because of another problem

Without knowing what the other problem was that originally led you to uninstall all of the USB port drivers— and without knowing what those USB port drivers were— it’s difficult to say what’s wrong.

It sounds like you’re saying you uninstalled all USB drivers, even the ones your operating system was using, not just the Yamaha USB drivers.

If that’s the case, you might need to do some sort of repair of the operating system— or, if you have a system restore point from before all of the problems started, restore back to that point and see if it fixes things.


Logged

Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


systernthal

Okay, the computer wouldn’t see the PSR-EW400 as an audio device without the driver installed.

I installed the latest version of the driver— https://usa.yamaha.com/support/updates/yamaha_steinberg_usb_driver_for_win.html— but I didn’t follow the installation instructions exactly; in particular, I did not turn off my computer first as requested in the instructions.

— I turned off my PSR-EW400.

— I unplugged the USB cable from my computer. (I prefer to leave the USB cable plugged into the back of my PSR-EW400 to minimize the number of times I plug in and unplug the cable, to avoid any unnecessary «wear and tear» on the port.)

— I installed the driver. At first the installation acted like it wasn’t doing anything— the progress indicator didn’t even start moving for a while— but once it finally got going it installed quickly.

— After the installation was over, I reconnected the USB cable to the computer.

— I turned on the PSR-EW400.

— I started my DAW again and verified that DIGITAL KEYBOARD-1 showed up as a MIDI device. (Interestingly enough, it was listed as just DIGITAL KEYBOARD, without the «-1» on the end, when I was using it as a class-compliant USB-MIDI device before installing the driver.)

— I verified that DIGITAL KEYBOARD was showing up as an audio device as well. (I forget the exact wording, but I believe it said «Line» in there somewhere.) I armed an audio track and was able to record myself playing the keyboard.

— When I played back the recorded audio track, it would not play through my computer’s speakers, although I think that was something to do with Steam (the video game platform), because Mixcraft said that my default audio devices were Steam something-or-other. But when I went into Mixcraft preferences and went to the audio setup, I was able to select DIGITAL KEYBOARD as the default audio input device and audio output device. Then I was able to play back the recorded audio track and hear it through my keyboard.

Hello — I’ve tried everything you’ve listed here. I keep seeing the Steinberg listed under audio devices, but it is grayed out and I am unable to check the box. Any further ideas? Thanks very much.


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I’m leery of uninstalling anything unless I’m sure I have all of the necessary files to reinstall it again.

Regarding the USB 2 vs. USB 3 issue, I’ve heard time and time again that USB 3 is backward-compatible with USB 2, therefore it’s okay to use a USB 3 port— but that doesn’t jive with what I’ve heard from people who couldn’t get a connection to work properly until they stopped trying to use a USB 3 port and switched to a USB 2 port. I don’t have any personal experience with this issue— yet— because so far all of my Windows computers and laptops have had only USB 2 ports. But as far as newer computers are concerned, USB 3 ports are becoming the norm and USB 2 ports are becoming the exception— or might not even be included at all.

And then there’s the USB cable. I believe the PSR-E manuals specifically say to use USB 2 cables, not USB 3 cables, and don’t say anything about the ports. But I don’t know whether plugging a USB 2 cable into a USB 3 port will resolve any issues being caused by a keyboard’s inability to interface as expected using USB 3.


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


However, as I’ve said before, the USB-MIDI driver that you’re trying to install is the wrong one.
But you don’t need to install that driver for the PSR-E363, and you shouldn’t try to install it.

I’m still confused about this one. Some comments that I’ve read before was «Yamaha PSR-E series is NOT USB-class-compliant (for example you can’t use it Linux), so USB-Midi driver is necessary». Maybe Win10 have their own Generic USB-Midi driver.


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The earliest PSR-E models were not class-compliant.

But according to what Yamaha told one of our members when he contacted them for clarification, beginning sometime around the release of (if I remember correctly) the PSR-E433, Yamaha began making the PSR-E keyboards class-compliant.


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710

The following users thanked this post: Practical Senses


AnupamEnosh

beginning sometime around the release of (if I remember correctly) the PSR-E433, Yamaha began making the PSR-E keyboards class-compliant.

I have tried and tested many Laptops with my E453, but out of 10 only one laptop worked for recognising my keyboard, even then I could not record my keyboard audio to PC. If all those PSRs are class compliant then why doesn’t it get detected on every PC, even after installing Steinberg driver ?


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Do you still have all of those laptops available?

If so, can you tell us what types of USB ports they had— USB 2 or USB 3?

Were you using the same USB cable when testing all of them, or different USB cables?

If they were different cables, can you tell us what types of USB cables they were— USB 1, USB 2, or USB 3?

Without any sort of technical details, it’s difficult to offer any theories as to why you had trouble with 9 out of 10 laptops. But I’d guess that the USB issue is probably one of the most common issues, particularly with more and more computing devices being equipped with USB 3 ports, fewer and fewer being equipped with USB 2 ports, and USB 3 cables therefore becoming much more common. Yamaha specifically states that USB 3 cables cannot be used, although I don’t think they mention the type of USB port being connected to.

I believe someone from Yamaha has also said— not to me, since I’ve never contacted Yamaha, but to a forum member of either this forum site or another forum site— that even though a keyboard is class-compliant there are sometimes issues on the computer side which necessitate installing Yamaha’s driver. I don’t remember if the Yamaha representative mentioned what sorts of issues there might be, but I imagine that the USB drivers which are installed on the computer are one of the factors. So that would be another detail to check on those other laptops— what are the details about the USB drivers which were being used by their operating systems?


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710



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skolkool

Hello. Did you find any solution? I see in the yamaha site the Steinberg driver requires Windows 7 SP1, whereas I have Windows 7 Ultimate. Do you think this will work? Thanks.

Hii, i have the same problem during installation driver. Did you find the solution for this problem? My keyboard psr e363 also. Need your help. Thank you


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


Topic: PSR-E363 not installing USB MIDI driver Error 25001  (Read 28060 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

guiboos

Hello,
I�ve just bought my PSR-E363 a week ago. I have 2 notebooks with Windows 10 (64-bit) latest update, one MACBOOOK and 2 cables USB available. I�ve mada all suggested steps (only the Yamaha-PC cable plugged, and then Turn ON Yamaha PSR-E3636). It detects DIGITAL KEYBOARD at Windows DEVCICE MANAGER. When I run the USB-MIDI Driver V3.1.4 for Win 10/8.1/8/7 SP1 (64-bit) (latest version) it stops with the Error 25001 — (no device (hardware) found. Then I�ve installed the Yamaha Steinberg USB Driver and It appears at the SOUND (CONTROL PANEL) as both playing and recording tabs. But I just can�t install the USB -MIDI driver. I�ve tried all combinations of cables and notebooks. The MACBOOK installs the driver but not detects the YAMAHA KEYBOARD as MIDI device. Then I went to the store I�ve bought it and took my notebook and cables to test other YAMAHA KEYBOARDS (E463 and another E363) with the same results I�ve got at home. What am I doing wrong?


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yado70


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I think that with the PSR-E453/PSR-EW400 as well as the PSR-E363/PSR-EW300/YPT-360 you’re supposed to install the Steinberg USB driver, and only that driver, not the Yamaha USB driver. I think the Steinberg driver is for both USB-audio and USB-MIDI, while the Yamaha driver is for USB-MIDI only. The PSR-E363’s USB connection carries audio and MIDI data simultaneously, and the driver needs to be able to understand the data coming through the USB connection. I don’t think the Yamaha driver can understand the combined audio and MIDI data— it isn’t programmed to pick out the MIDI data and ignore the audio data— which is why it can’t detect the keyboard as you’re expecting. So you need the Steinberg driver, which is programmed to handle both types of data.

Likewise, if the situation were reversed and you were trying to install the Steinberg driver with a Yamaha keyboard that has USB-MIDI but not USB-audio, I think you would also get an error, because the Steinberg driver is programmed to expect both types of data in the USB signal and would not be able to handle the lack of audio data in the USB signal.


Logged

Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


guiboos

Hi,
I just couln’t install that MIDI mapper You’ve said, yado70. I’ve put the PLWMidiMap.cpl file at c:windowssystem32 and the Control Panel didn’t recognized it.

Thanks for you reply, SeaGtGruff. Is there any other means to test MIDI?


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You shouldn’t need a MIDI mapper with Windows 10. But if you just want to check whether the computer is receiving MIDI data, or would like to monitor its MIDI data, there’s a little utility program called «MIDI-OX» that lets you monitor MIDI data, or route MIDI data from one MIDI port to another, and other functions.


Logged

Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


Yudaasta

Hii, i have the same problem during installation driver. Did you find the solution for this problem? My keyboard psr e363 also. Need your help. Thank you


Logged


I have a PSR-EW400, which uses the same USB-Audio/MIDI driver as the PSR-E363— and, like the PSR-E363, it’s USB-MIDI class-compliant, so it shouldn’t need a driver.

When I connected my PSR-EW400 to my computer for the first time (just a moment ago), Windows said it was setting up the DIGITAL KEYBOARD device. Then it said DIGITAL KEYBOARD is ready to use. I started up my main DAW (Acoustica Mixcraft), and DIGITAL KEYBOARD shows up as an external instrument. I was able to create a simple 1-bar loop, complete with Bank/Program messages, and sequence it to the keyboard, no problem. I did not need to install a driver at all. So for a MIDI connection you don’t need to install the driver.

I haven’t tried to see if I can record the audio over the USB connection without installing the driver, but will try it next.


Logged

Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


Okay, the computer wouldn’t see the PSR-EW400 as an audio device without the driver installed.

I installed the latest version of the driver— https://usa.yamaha.com/support/updates/yamaha_steinberg_usb_driver_for_win.html— but I didn’t follow the installation instructions exactly; in particular, I did not turn off my computer first as requested in the instructions.

— I turned off my PSR-EW400.

— I unplugged the USB cable from my computer. (I prefer to leave the USB cable plugged into the back of my PSR-EW400 to minimize the number of times I plug in and unplug the cable, to avoid any unnecessary «wear and tear» on the port.)

— I installed the driver. At first the installation acted like it wasn’t doing anything— the progress indicator didn’t even start moving for a while— but once it finally got going it installed quickly.

— After the installation was over, I reconnected the USB cable to the computer.

— I turned on the PSR-EW400.

— I started my DAW again and verified that DIGITAL KEYBOARD-1 showed up as a MIDI device. (Interestingly enough, it was listed as just DIGITAL KEYBOARD, without the «-1» on the end, when I was using it as a class-compliant USB-MIDI device before installing the driver.)

— I verified that DIGITAL KEYBOARD was showing up as an audio device as well. (I forget the exact wording, but I believe it said «Line» in there somewhere.) I armed an audio track and was able to record myself playing the keyboard.

— When I played back the recorded audio track, it would not play through my computer’s speakers, although I think that was something to do with Steam (the video game platform), because Mixcraft said that my default audio devices were Steam something-or-other. But when I went into Mixcraft preferences and went to the audio setup, I was able to select DIGITAL KEYBOARD as the default audio input device and audio output device. Then I was able to play back the recorded audio track and hear it through my keyboard.


Logged

Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


By the way, I notice that Yamaha’s USA site is listing the standard USB-MIDI driver for the PSR-EW410, which is definitely the wrong driver for it. I don’t see any driver listed for the PSR-E363, but you need the Yamaha Steinberg driver, version 1.10.0— the one I linked to in my previous post— not Yamaha’s standard driver which is currently at version 3.1.4. The standard driver will not work, because it will not be able to understand the USB-audio portion of the data, which is why it won’t recognize the PSR-E363. As long as you use the correct driver, it should work.

However, I should also mention that you need to use USB 2, not USB 3. If your computer or laptop doesn’t have a USB 2 port, try at least using a USB 2 cable, as the manual specifically says that you should not use a USB 3 cable.


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


hsatrio

Hi.

 I have a similar problem here.

I have PSR E363, trying to connect to windows 10 64 bit but failed.
I already download the updated usb driver (um314164), I cannot install the driver because of error 25005. What does error 25005 mean?

this problem appear when I uninstall all of my usb port driver because of another problem and after that I failed to install the usb midi driver.

I already install steinberg usb driver (YSUSB_V1100_Win) that you suggested earlier but it doesn’t work too.

My device manager detected digital keyboard but with [!] sign, so in my understanding it must be driver problem.

When the digital keyboard usb success to install before the problem, my PSR is detected in Ableton perfectly.

please help me  :'(

« Last Edit: February 25, 2018, 02:36:24 PM by hsatrio »


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Logged


I can’t find any specific information on the web about error 25005, because it could mean different things in different programs, but the general meaning seems to be— as panos suggested— that the installation wasn’t successful. The specifics of why it wasn’t successful is the part that could vary depending on the program.

However, as I’ve said before, the USB-MIDI driver that you’re trying to install is the wrong one. Apparently it can’t detect the PSR-E363 correctly, probably due to the fact that the PSR-E363’s USB signal carries audio information as well as MIDI information, so the data doesn’t have the expected format. And if the installation program can’t find an attached keyboard that it understands, the installation will fail.

But you don’t need to install that driver for the PSR-E363, and you shouldn’t try to install it.

Here’s what I recommend:

(1) Click on the Notifications icon— the square caption icon on the right side of the task bar— and when the notifications panel slides into view from the right side of the screen, click on the «All settings» option.

(2) In the «Settings» window, click on the «Apps» option, then be patient as Windows populates the «Apps & features» list, which might take a few minutes if you have a lot of programs installed.

(3) Scroll down to the bottom of the list and look for any programs that start with «Yamaha.» If you see «Yamaha USB-MIDI Driver» listed, click on it so you get the «Modify» and «Uninstall» buttons, then click on the «Uninstall» button.

(4) If prompted to do so, restart Windows, then repeat steps 1 and 2. Then scroll down and see if «Yamaha Steinberg USB Driver» is listed. If it is, click on it, then click on the «Uninstall» button.

Note that you should not need to install the Yamaha Steinberg USB Driver at all unless you want to use the PSR-E363’s USB-audio, because its USB-MIDI should work without needing to install that driver.

If you do want to use the USB-audio, disconnect the PSR-E363 from the computer before you try to install the Yamaha Steinberg USB Driver. Then install that driver, reconnect the PSR-E363 to the computer, and see if it works as it should in your DAW.


Logged

Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


hsatrio

Thank you all for the quick replay. I really appreciate it.

right now, I already install asio4all from the beginning, I use focusrite scarlett solo and I use Ableton for my DAW software.

I already uninstall the two USB driver (steinberg and yamaha) but Ableton still cannot detect my PSR.
I was succeeded to connect my PSR to Ableton before, I’m bit confused why Ableton cannot detect my PSR right now.

If the PSR is succeeded to connect, Ableton gave a signal in the right corner of the apps when you push any button. In my case, Ableton didn’t give a signal at all.

Also, Ableton does not provide digital keyboard option on link midi preferences and in device manager the digital keyboard gave me sign [?].

did you know what is wrong with my keyboard or computer?

My usb hub is working fine for another device.

I really confuse  :'(


Logged


If you’re trying to use your PSR-E363 with a USB hub, it most likely will not work. I believe the manual says that you cannot connect the PSR-E363 to a USB hub, that it must be connected directly to a USB port on the computer.

Are you connecting the PSR-E363 to the Focusrite? I don’t think that will work, either— unless you’re connecting only the keyboard’s audio out to the Focusrite. But if you connect the PSR-E363 directly to the computer, you should be able to use the PSR-E363’s USB audio rather than needing to go through an audio interface.


Logged

Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


hsatrio

No, I didn’t connect my PSR to Focusrite and I connect my PSR directly from USB Port and still cannot detect any signal.

I cannot connect to Yamaha apps too

Is it my problem is my usb port?

« Last Edit: February 25, 2018, 11:35:00 PM by hsatrio »


Logged


Maybe you could download a free program that connects with midi keyboards like synthesia or something, to see if your computer can indentify your psr at least as a midi keyboard.


Logged


this problem appear when I uninstall all of my usb port driver because of another problem

Without knowing what the other problem was that originally led you to uninstall all of the USB port drivers— and without knowing what those USB port drivers were— it’s difficult to say what’s wrong.

It sounds like you’re saying you uninstalled all USB drivers, even the ones your operating system was using, not just the Yamaha USB drivers.

If that’s the case, you might need to do some sort of repair of the operating system— or, if you have a system restore point from before all of the problems started, restore back to that point and see if it fixes things.


Logged

Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


systernthal

Okay, the computer wouldn’t see the PSR-EW400 as an audio device without the driver installed.

I installed the latest version of the driver— https://usa.yamaha.com/support/updates/yamaha_steinberg_usb_driver_for_win.html— but I didn’t follow the installation instructions exactly; in particular, I did not turn off my computer first as requested in the instructions.

— I turned off my PSR-EW400.

— I unplugged the USB cable from my computer. (I prefer to leave the USB cable plugged into the back of my PSR-EW400 to minimize the number of times I plug in and unplug the cable, to avoid any unnecessary «wear and tear» on the port.)

— I installed the driver. At first the installation acted like it wasn’t doing anything— the progress indicator didn’t even start moving for a while— but once it finally got going it installed quickly.

— After the installation was over, I reconnected the USB cable to the computer.

— I turned on the PSR-EW400.

— I started my DAW again and verified that DIGITAL KEYBOARD-1 showed up as a MIDI device. (Interestingly enough, it was listed as just DIGITAL KEYBOARD, without the «-1» on the end, when I was using it as a class-compliant USB-MIDI device before installing the driver.)

— I verified that DIGITAL KEYBOARD was showing up as an audio device as well. (I forget the exact wording, but I believe it said «Line» in there somewhere.) I armed an audio track and was able to record myself playing the keyboard.

— When I played back the recorded audio track, it would not play through my computer’s speakers, although I think that was something to do with Steam (the video game platform), because Mixcraft said that my default audio devices were Steam something-or-other. But when I went into Mixcraft preferences and went to the audio setup, I was able to select DIGITAL KEYBOARD as the default audio input device and audio output device. Then I was able to play back the recorded audio track and hear it through my keyboard.

Hello — I’ve tried everything you’ve listed here. I keep seeing the Steinberg listed under audio devices, but it is grayed out and I am unable to check the box. Any further ideas? Thanks very much.


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I’m leery of uninstalling anything unless I’m sure I have all of the necessary files to reinstall it again.

Regarding the USB 2 vs. USB 3 issue, I’ve heard time and time again that USB 3 is backward-compatible with USB 2, therefore it’s okay to use a USB 3 port— but that doesn’t jive with what I’ve heard from people who couldn’t get a connection to work properly until they stopped trying to use a USB 3 port and switched to a USB 2 port. I don’t have any personal experience with this issue— yet— because so far all of my Windows computers and laptops have had only USB 2 ports. But as far as newer computers are concerned, USB 3 ports are becoming the norm and USB 2 ports are becoming the exception— or might not even be included at all.

And then there’s the USB cable. I believe the PSR-E manuals specifically say to use USB 2 cables, not USB 3 cables, and don’t say anything about the ports. But I don’t know whether plugging a USB 2 cable into a USB 3 port will resolve any issues being caused by a keyboard’s inability to interface as expected using USB 3.


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710


However, as I’ve said before, the USB-MIDI driver that you’re trying to install is the wrong one.
But you don’t need to install that driver for the PSR-E363, and you shouldn’t try to install it.

I’m still confused about this one. Some comments that I’ve read before was «Yamaha PSR-E series is NOT USB-class-compliant (for example you can’t use it Linux), so USB-Midi driver is necessary». Maybe Win10 have their own Generic USB-Midi driver.


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The earliest PSR-E models were not class-compliant.

But according to what Yamaha told one of our members when he contacted them for clarification, beginning sometime around the release of (if I remember correctly) the PSR-E433, Yamaha began making the PSR-E keyboards class-compliant.


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710

The following users thanked this post: Practical Senses


AnupamEnosh

beginning sometime around the release of (if I remember correctly) the PSR-E433, Yamaha began making the PSR-E keyboards class-compliant.

I have tried and tested many Laptops with my E453, but out of 10 only one laptop worked for recognising my keyboard, even then I could not record my keyboard audio to PC. If all those PSRs are class compliant then why doesn’t it get detected on every PC, even after installing Steinberg driver ?


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Do you still have all of those laptops available?

If so, can you tell us what types of USB ports they had— USB 2 or USB 3?

Were you using the same USB cable when testing all of them, or different USB cables?

If they were different cables, can you tell us what types of USB cables they were— USB 1, USB 2, or USB 3?

Without any sort of technical details, it’s difficult to offer any theories as to why you had trouble with 9 out of 10 laptops. But I’d guess that the USB issue is probably one of the most common issues, particularly with more and more computing devices being equipped with USB 3 ports, fewer and fewer being equipped with USB 2 ports, and USB 3 cables therefore becoming much more common. Yamaha specifically states that USB 3 cables cannot be used, although I don’t think they mention the type of USB port being connected to.

I believe someone from Yamaha has also said— not to me, since I’ve never contacted Yamaha, but to a forum member of either this forum site or another forum site— that even though a keyboard is class-compliant there are sometimes issues on the computer side which necessitate installing Yamaha’s driver. I don’t remember if the Yamaha representative mentioned what sorts of issues there might be, but I imagine that the USB drivers which are installed on the computer are one of the factors. So that would be another detail to check on those other laptops— what are the details about the USB drivers which were being used by their operating systems?


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710



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skolkool

Hello. Did you find any solution? I see in the yamaha site the Steinberg driver requires Windows 7 SP1, whereas I have Windows 7 Ultimate. Do you think this will work? Thanks.

Hii, i have the same problem during installation driver. Did you find the solution for this problem? My keyboard psr e363 also. Need your help. Thank you


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Michael Rideout
Current keyboards: Yamaha YPT-400, PSR-E433, PSR-E443, PSR-EW400, MX49 BK
Current controllers: M-Audio Axiom 61-II
Previous keyboards: Farfisa Matador 611; Casio CTK-710



Go to techsupport


Error 25001 for installing Yamaha MIDI Driver

Description of problem

Title says it all, I am unable to install my MIDI drivers due to a constant Error 25001: No Device is connected. I have a Yamaha E203 Keyboard and am running windows 10.

Other relevant info

Windows 10, Keyboard E203.

When this issue began

Yesterday.

Recurring issue

Yes

Cause/Steps to recreate the issue

Install Midi drivers for keyboard?

What I’ve tried so far to resolve the issue

Installing different versions of the MIDI drivers.

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