🎶 Welcome to Musik-Ebert – where music is at home! 🎸🥁

🚀 Deals for true music lovers – discover them now! 🎸

  • FREE SHIPPING from 19€

    on everything Germany-wide

  • 14 days right of return

    Exchange or return

  • refund warranty

    after return

  • First class advice

    We would be happy to advise you

☀️ SUMMER OPENING! Discover our hot June deals 🎸 Your sound for summer starts here 🌊 Happy saving! ✨

Yamaha NU1XA: real piano action in a digital body

Yamaha NU1XA AvantGrand Hybrid Piano - Musik-Ebert Gmbh

The Yamaha NU1XA from the AvantGrand range is neither an ordinary digital piano nor an acoustic piano: it is a hybrid piano. It pairs a real upright piano action, with wooden parts and hammers, with purely digital sound generation. Anyone who wants the touch of an acoustic piano without its volume or tuning upkeep finds a category of its own here.

This spotlight explains what is genuinely mechanical about the NU1XA, how the playing feel differs from a regular digital piano and which playing situation the instrument is built for.

01What hybrid really means on the NU1XA

The decisive point: the Yamaha NU1XA AvantGrand Hybrid Piano contains a real upright piano action with wooden parts and vertical hammers, the same kind built into acoustic Yamaha pianos. When you press a key, a genuine hammer action moves, not an electronic imitation with weights.

What is missing are the strings. Instead of producing sound through hammers striking strings, a non-contact sensor system detects the movement and triggers digital sound generation. Hence the term hybrid: the action is real, the sound source is digital. That is the core difference that sets the NU1XA apart from a pure digital piano.

02Touch: the difference from a regular digital piano

A good digital piano simulates the piano feel through a weighted hammer-action keyboard with counterweights and sensors. That is enough for many players and has matured over the years. The NU1XA goes a step further: it does not simulate, it uses the real piano action itself.

For demanding players this shows in the details: the repetition speed during fast passages, the resistance point, the way the key responds at half depth. Anyone coming from an acoustic piano finds a more familiar touch on a NU1XA than on most digital pianos.

Yamaha NU1XA AvantGrand Hybrid Piano - Musik-Ebert Gmbh
Yamaha NU1XA AvantGrand Hybrid Piano
View product →

03The sound: CFX and Bösendorfer Imperial

Sound generation draws on two reference grand pianos: the Yamaha CFX concert grand, with its wide dynamic range from clear highs to deep bass, and the Bösendorfer Imperial, with its warm, colour-rich Viennese tone. Through headphones, binaural recordings of these instruments offer a natural spatial image that stays easy on the ears even during long practice sessions.

Because the sound is generated digitally, the instrument always stays perfectly in tune. There are no strings to retune and no tuning appointment to schedule.

04Who the NU1XA is built for

The NU1XA is built for players who want the authentic touch of an acoustic piano but live in a situation where an acoustic piano is difficult: the rented flat with thin walls, the evening in an apartment block, the hours when you want to practise without disturbing others. Through headphones the NU1XA is silent to the outside while keeping a fully mechanical playing feel.

There is also the compact, upright build. The NU1XA needs no more floor space than a slim upright piano and so fits into homes where a grand piano would not. If, on the other hand, you are looking for the simplest and most affordable way to practise, a classic digital piano from our selection of Digitalpianos is often already a good fit. The hybrid pays off when the real touch is the goal.

Three instrument categories at a glance
ActionSound sourceTuning neededQuiet practice
Acoustic pianorealstringsyes, regularlyno
Hybrid piano (NU1XA)realdigitalnoyes, via headphones
Digital pianosimulateddigitalnoyes, via headphones

05An alternative in the hybrid segment: Kawai Novus NV6

In the same segment sits the Kawai Novus NV6 Hybrid Piano Schwarz poliert. The Kawai Novus NV6 also relies on a real upright piano action combined with digital sound generation, following the same hybrid idea as the NU1XA, only with Kawai's own action and tonal voicing.

For the buying decision it is worth comparing both actions and tonal characters, because touch and tone are matters of taste in which the two makers deliberately differ.

The Yamaha NU1XA answers a very concrete question: a real piano touch, without the volume and tuning upkeep of an acoustic piano. Anyone looking for exactly that finds a category of its own in the hybrid segment, one that an ordinary digital piano does not replace.

Frequently asked questions

Does the Yamaha NU1XA have real strings?
No. The NU1XA has a real upright piano action with wooden parts and hammers, but no strings. The sound is generated digitally, which is why the instrument never needs tuning.
How does the NU1XA differ from a regular digital piano?
A digital piano simulates the piano feel through a weighted keyboard. The NU1XA uses a real piano action from acoustic piano building, which is why the touch is closer to an acoustic instrument.
Can I practise quietly with the NU1XA?
Yes. Through headphones the NU1XA is silent to the outside while keeping a fully mechanical playing feel. Binaural recordings of the CFX and Bösendorfer Imperial are available through headphones.
Which sounds does the NU1XA offer?
Sound generation is based on the Yamaha CFX concert grand and the Bösendorfer Imperial, plus further voices and a polyphony of 256 notes.
How much space does the NU1XA need?
The NU1XA has a compact, upright build and needs no more floor space than a slim upright piano. It therefore fits into homes where a grand piano would not.

Explore hybrid and digital pianos

Compare the NU1XA with other models in our selection.

View the Yamaha NU1XAAll digital pianos

Passende Produkte

Yamaha NU1XA AvantGrand Hybrid Piano

Regular price From €5.945,58 EUR
In stock