P
pure.fusion
New member
Hi guys,
https://homerecording.com/bbs/equip...tar-tuning-temperament-primer-revised-290728/
I finally read this sticky - yeah, I was wondering about the Buzz Feiten system. Obvioulsy it's not a total solution to the native temperament issue. Whether or not it gives a more accurate tuning overall on average, who knows. Personally, I think for a lot of the people I see caught up in worrying about it, there's probably a whole bunch of more effective things they could be doing to address their tuning and guitar playing
Anyway, on to the topic at hand.
Have you ever noticed that when you tune your guitar with a tuner, the top E and bottom E strings don’t sound like they’re in tune?
Or looking from the other direction, if you tune your top E and bottom E by ear until they sound like they are in tune, have you noticed that the tuner says that they are not in tune?
Over the years, I’ve come to tune my guitars this way. I tune with a tuner, then I make the top E slightly sharper, and the bottom E slightly flatter until they *sound* like they are perfectly in tune, then I graduate the middle strings (A, D, G, B) to suit the E strings which have now shifted. (ie the A slightly flatter to approach the bottom E, and the B slightly sharper to approach the top E).
Now, to me this tuning sounds more in tune than a “tuner” tune. Is there a name for this tuning or anomaly that’s going on?
Does anybody else out there do this?
Cheers,
FM
https://homerecording.com/bbs/equip...tar-tuning-temperament-primer-revised-290728/
I finally read this sticky - yeah, I was wondering about the Buzz Feiten system. Obvioulsy it's not a total solution to the native temperament issue. Whether or not it gives a more accurate tuning overall on average, who knows. Personally, I think for a lot of the people I see caught up in worrying about it, there's probably a whole bunch of more effective things they could be doing to address their tuning and guitar playing

Anyway, on to the topic at hand.
Have you ever noticed that when you tune your guitar with a tuner, the top E and bottom E strings don’t sound like they’re in tune?
Or looking from the other direction, if you tune your top E and bottom E by ear until they sound like they are in tune, have you noticed that the tuner says that they are not in tune?
Over the years, I’ve come to tune my guitars this way. I tune with a tuner, then I make the top E slightly sharper, and the bottom E slightly flatter until they *sound* like they are perfectly in tune, then I graduate the middle strings (A, D, G, B) to suit the E strings which have now shifted. (ie the A slightly flatter to approach the bottom E, and the B slightly sharper to approach the top E).
Now, to me this tuning sounds more in tune than a “tuner” tune. Is there a name for this tuning or anomaly that’s going on?
Does anybody else out there do this?
Cheers,
FM