Organs and synthesizers can, and usually do, have more than one manual; most home instruments have two manuals, while most larger organs have two or three. Elaborate pipe organs and theater organs can have four or more manuals. The manuals are set into the
organ console (or "keydesk"). The layout of a manual is roughly the same as a
piano keyboard, with long, usually ivory or light-colored keys for the natural notes of the Western
musical scale, and shorter, usually ebony or dark-colored keys for the five
sharps and
flats. A typical, full-size organ manual consists of five
octaves, or 61 keys. Piano keyboards, by contrast, normally have 88 keys; some
electric pianos and
digital pianos have fewer keys, such as 61 or 73 keys. Some smaller electronic organs may have manuals of four octaves or less (25, 49, 44, or even 37 keys). Changes in registration through use of drawknobs, stop tabs, or other mechanisms to control
organ stops allow such instruments to achieve an aggregate range well in excess of pianos and other keyboard instruments even with manuals of shorter pitch range and smaller size., England, with four manuals. On smaller electronic organs and synthesizers, the manuals may span fewer octaves, and they may also be offset, with the lower one an octave to the left of the upper one. This arrangement encourages the organist to play the melody line on the upper manual while playing the harmony line, chords or
bassline on the lower manual. On pipe organs each manual plays a specific subset of the
organ's stops, and electric organs (e.g.,
Hammond organ) can emulate this style of play. Hammond organs differ from pipe organs in that pipe organs can only pull a stop out (that is, turn on a stop) or push it in (turning off this stop); in contrast, Hammond organs typically have drawbars, so that the player can control how much of each "
pipe rank" (e.g., 16 ft, 8 ft, 4 ft 2 ft, etc.) they wish to use. Synthesizers can program separate manuals to emulate sounds of various orchestral sections or instruments, using imitative digital sounds or sampling of real instruments, or using entirely synthesized sounds. On digital synthesizer instruments a performer can produce the sounds of an entire
orchestra through the use of all available manuals in conjunction with the pedalboard and the various registration controls. ==Organ manuals vs. piano keyboards==