
Tadpui
Well-known member
What make and model do you guys suggest for a tuner that's in the price range of an everyday Joe, can be used for a stay-at-home player of electric guitar, steel and nylon string acoustic guitar, and bass guitar, yet has enough precision to set intonation well enough to satisfy said everyday Joe?
Is the Peterson StroboStomp virtual strobe precise enough for setting intonation? It's bigger brothers look nice but they're out of my price range. Let's say that the StroboStomp is the price ceiling for what I'm looking for. Any suggestions at that price level or cheaper? I'm not a pro, so absolute upper-end scientific, physics lab, rocket scientist precision isn't required. As long as I can set my intonation on it well enough to satisfy an amateur home recordist and living room performer, I'll be happy.
I've set my intonation all these years with this crappy "Lighting Fast" cheapo tuner that wouldn't be able to tune its way out of a phone both. It's OK for getting my A string tuned to 440 Hz and then I take it from there:
- I get my A string to 440
- Tune the 3rd string 2nd fret to open 5th string
- Tune the 1st string 5th fret to open 5th string
- Tune 6th string 5th fret to open 5th string
- Tune 4th string open to 5th string 5th fret
- Tune 2nd string 5th fret to 6th string open
- Cross-check the 2nd string (a.k.a. the Bitch string) 3rd fret to 4th string open
- After all of this, the 3rd string still tends to sound sharp when its the 3rd interval of a barre chord, and the 2nd string still sounds sharp when it's the 3rd interval of an "extended power chord" for lack of a better term (root on 5th string, 5th on 4th string, octave on 3rd string, 3rd on 2nd string, 5th on 1st string).
So it'd be nice to be able to get, say, my Les Paul tuned and then "sweetened" like I outlined above and then store the sweetened tuning. Then my Martin acoustic has a different sweetened tuning that it'd be nice to store and recall later. Even putting a capo on a guitar requires a different sweetened tuning, so memory store and recall would be a great feature along with enough precision to set intonation.
I like the idea of simple tuners like the Boss and Fender stomp boxes, but they're not exactly prime examples of scientific precision. I like the looks and the down-to-basics style of the Korg needle tuners. The Peterson StroboStomp looks a little goofy but it seems to be pretty fully-featured. Are there any other must-try tuners out there for a reasonable price? Remember that I don't run a guitar tech booth at Guitar Center or anything so top-of-the-line isn't a necessity.
Is the Peterson StroboStomp virtual strobe precise enough for setting intonation? It's bigger brothers look nice but they're out of my price range. Let's say that the StroboStomp is the price ceiling for what I'm looking for. Any suggestions at that price level or cheaper? I'm not a pro, so absolute upper-end scientific, physics lab, rocket scientist precision isn't required. As long as I can set my intonation on it well enough to satisfy an amateur home recordist and living room performer, I'll be happy.
I've set my intonation all these years with this crappy "Lighting Fast" cheapo tuner that wouldn't be able to tune its way out of a phone both. It's OK for getting my A string tuned to 440 Hz and then I take it from there:
- I get my A string to 440
- Tune the 3rd string 2nd fret to open 5th string
- Tune the 1st string 5th fret to open 5th string
- Tune 6th string 5th fret to open 5th string
- Tune 4th string open to 5th string 5th fret
- Tune 2nd string 5th fret to 6th string open
- Cross-check the 2nd string (a.k.a. the Bitch string) 3rd fret to 4th string open
- After all of this, the 3rd string still tends to sound sharp when its the 3rd interval of a barre chord, and the 2nd string still sounds sharp when it's the 3rd interval of an "extended power chord" for lack of a better term (root on 5th string, 5th on 4th string, octave on 3rd string, 3rd on 2nd string, 5th on 1st string).
So it'd be nice to be able to get, say, my Les Paul tuned and then "sweetened" like I outlined above and then store the sweetened tuning. Then my Martin acoustic has a different sweetened tuning that it'd be nice to store and recall later. Even putting a capo on a guitar requires a different sweetened tuning, so memory store and recall would be a great feature along with enough precision to set intonation.
I like the idea of simple tuners like the Boss and Fender stomp boxes, but they're not exactly prime examples of scientific precision. I like the looks and the down-to-basics style of the Korg needle tuners. The Peterson StroboStomp looks a little goofy but it seems to be pretty fully-featured. Are there any other must-try tuners out there for a reasonable price? Remember that I don't run a guitar tech booth at Guitar Center or anything so top-of-the-line isn't a necessity.