danno858 Yes, it's not easy to tell through AirPods. But you got it right!
rsl12 You are not the first one to mention Pianoteq can sound too perfectly tuned. It does have a slider to simulate poorer tuning state of piano. I haven't tried it though. I am curious, are concert piano used on the big stage tuned more "perfectly" than the home ones?
TC3 Good point on acoustic pianos don't sound alike either. I think digital people can be overly picky. I myself alternate between these three piano sounds and find myself get used to any of them after 5-10 minutes.
Animisha LifelongBeginner A is indeed more metallic especially in the bass region, which I thought is the defining characteristic of the Bösendorfer that Pianoteq try to model. Another factor is the default profile see to have less reverb than B (Pianoteq Shigeru Kawai). With less reverb, the piano sounds dry via headphone, but may sound better in a room. When I moved my studio from a larger room to a smaller room, Piano B went from sounding perfect to sounding a little too much reverb.
navindra C does sound "woody", everytime I switch to it. I don't have experience with acoustic piano, so I always wonder if this is appropriate amount of woodiness. But as I said, I get used to it after 5-10 minutes of playing.
Jane David Lai identified the sampled from modeled correctly, even without ability to see the big letters on the video. Amazing ears!