
bongolation
New member
BTW, compensated nut schemes for guitar go back at least as far as the '50s.
bongolation said:I doubt anyone on earth hates tuning instruments more than I do.
bongolation said:BTW, compensated nut schemes for guitar go back at least as far as the '50s.
Mr songwriter said:One of these days someone will invent a self-tuning guitar and become very rich indeed.
Codmate said:
apl said:Here's an interesting article on equal temperament. Sorry for abusing the spelling earlier.
famous beagle said:I've seen an ad in a magazine for some type of alteration that can be done to your guitar that's supposed to take care of these intonation problems. I can't remember the name of the company, but the ad had Steve Vai and Robben Ford testifying. I think it had Eric Johnson too (or maybe Larry Carlton?), but I can't remember. Anyway, they were saying things like "After all these years, I'm FINALLY in tune." It looked interesting. They said it could be done to any guitar without altering the appearance. And I want to say the cost was something like around $300 or so.
Anyone else see this ad?
David Katauskas said:You'll get perfect (to the ear and chromatic tuner) intonation at any fret on any string...period. All you have to do is tune it correctly the first time.
Just not all of the notes at the same time.David Katauskas said:You'll get perfect (to the ear and chromatic tuner) intonation at any fret on any string...period.
apl said:Here's an interesting article on equal temperament. Sorry for abusing the spelling earlier.
David Katauskas said:Then maybe I'm missunderstanding...I can hook-up my chromatic tuner and play any note on the entire fretboard, and it will always register a perfect note. I can also play an open C chord at