I HAVE used a free download piece of software which is the same format as a very expensive german piano tuning machine which i use and encouraged my piano tuning students to buy when i was a lecturer in that field. it has a free version. my son has downloaded it to his pda and is able to use it for tuning pianos. it is called tunelab. i'm not sure of the url. but i can get it from my son if you would like. it uses a dotted line like a strobe. when it moves right the note is sharp, and when left the note is flat. the note is perfectly in tune when the dots are stationary. 19 different temperaments, stretching etc.
kind regards:
harry
----- Original Message ----- From: "Jim Portillo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "PC audio discussion list. " <Pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Saturday, January 29, 2005 8:32 PM
Subject: Accessible Tuners



Hi everyone,

I'm throwing this question out there.
Does anyone know if there are any accessible tuners out there used for helping to tune guitars? I'm playing a lot more these days and it would be nice to have one of those electronic tuner that will tell me if each string is in tune.
I know for the regular ones, they have some sort of needle that moves if one is sharp or flat.
I just didn't know if anyone knew of a good one that could be used by a blind person.
If not, well...I guess it's time to start working on one. LOL
Jim
PS. I guess this ruins the old stereotype that all blind people have perfect pitch, eh?
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