Tuning Pedal Steel Guitar -- A History

Instruments, mechanical issues, copedents, techniques, etc.

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Barry Hyman
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Tuning Pedal Steel Guitar -- A History

Post by Barry Hyman »

A steel guitar without pedals should be tuned to Just Intonation (JI). Whatever chord you tune to, it will sound equally good at every fret.

When you add pedals and knee levers, however, it becomes an instrument in need of Equal Tempered Tuning (ET). Now you can play a lot of chords at every fret, so ET is a brilliant compromise that makes every chord sound good enough. Pianos, keyboards, and all fretted instruments use ET, because it is a necessary compromise for any instrument that wants to sound in tune in every key. It is also a necessary compromise for a pedal steel guitar, where you want to have several chords that all sound in tune at every fret.

In the old days there were no digital tuners so we all tuned any way we could. Octaves, harmonics, guesswork -- we did whatever we could to get the thing close to in tune. So all pedal steel guitarists developed ways of tuning that were highly idiosyncratic. (What my Vermont buddies would call a "cob job.") Whatever seems to work, in other words. Retro-minded psg players therefore assume that these old methods must be the best. Wrong.

When digital tuners came on the market, it became possible, for the first time, to tune a pedal steel, pedals, knee levers and all, in a scientific manner. And the scientific manner, since the time of JS Bach in the 18th century, has been equal tempered tuning. End of story. Unless you play just two or three chords (such as I, IV, and V at each fret) you need ET tuning. JI tuning for psg is a myth. It makes no sense for pedal steel. The misunderstanding comes from the historical context, that in the old days there was no better way to tune a psg that to use harmonics, which gives you JI tuning. Now (for the last 30 years!) there is a better way.
I give music lessons on several different instruments in Cambridge, NY (between Bennington, VT and Albany, NY). But my true love is pedal steel. I've been obsessed with steel since 1972; don't know anything I'd rather talk about... www.barryhyman.com
Pete Burak
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Post by Pete Burak »

Good one!!!
:lol:
ET is just as out of tune all over the map as any method.
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Lee Baucum
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Post by Lee Baucum »

Fact or opinion? ---> Click Here
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Post by Franklin »

Pete Burak wrote:Good one!!!
:lol:
ET is just as out of tune all over the map as any method.
Pete....Touche'

Lee......Nice point......

Paul
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Post by Dickie Whitley »

Well, I'm going to give the JI a chance, I already know ET. Then maybe meantone. Then who knows.
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Post by Johnny Thomasson »

Barry Hyman wrote:A steel guitar without pedals should be tuned to Just Intonation (JI). Whatever chord you tune to, it will sound equally good at every fret.

When you add pedals and knee levers, however, it becomes an instrument in need of Equal Tempered Tuning (ET). Now you can play a lot of chords at every fret, so ET is a brilliant compromise that makes every chord sound good enough. Pianos, keyboards, and all fretted instruments use ET, because it is a necessary compromise for any instrument that wants to sound in tune in every key. It is also a necessary compromise for a pedal steel guitar, where you want to have several chords that all sound in tune at every fret.

In the old days there were no digital tuners so we all tuned any way we could. Octaves, harmonics, guesswork -- we did whatever we could to get the thing close to in tune. So all pedal steel guitarists developed ways of tuning that were highly idiosyncratic. (What my Vermont buddies would call a "cob job.") Whatever seems to work, in other words. Retro-minded psg players therefore assume that these old methods must be the best. Wrong.

When digital tuners came on the market, it became possible, for the first time, to tune a pedal steel, pedals, knee levers and all, in a scientific manner. And the scientific manner, since the time of JS Bach in the 18th century, has been equal tempered tuning. End of story. Unless you play just two or three chords (such as I, IV, and V at each fret) you need ET tuning. JI tuning for psg is a myth. It makes no sense for pedal steel. The misunderstanding comes from the historical context, that in the old days there was no better way to tune a psg that to use harmonics, which gives you JI tuning. Now (for the last 30 years!) there is a better way.
Well, I'm glad that issue is finally cleared up! :lol:
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Bob Hoffnar
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Post by Bob Hoffnar »

So I guess that means that using a digital tuner will make your steel more in tune than it sounds ?

Barry, In my personal opinion your concept about tuning is breathtakingly misguided.
Bob
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Post by David Doggett »

The beauty of a steel guitar, with or without pedals, is that with the bar we can move sweet JI chords to any fret. The people who invented the pedals and levers used in the common E9 and C6 pedal steel tunings wisely chose pedals and levers that kept the sweet JI sound. That was no accident. The pedals and levers have tunable stops that facilitate JI for the common chords they were designed for. Other less commonly used chords are typically dissonant chords with any tuning. It doesn't necessarily make good sense to tune the commonly used simple chords out of tune (ET) for the sake of those less common dissonant chords.

ET is a necessary evil for playing a piano in all keys. A steel guitar is not a piano, and can play JI in all keys.

JI is scientifically in tune according to harmonic theory. ET is scientifically compromised, which is what the term "tempered" means.

So I agree with Bob H. It's less about thinking and more about listening. If ET sounds better to you for what you play, then go for it. If not, don't.
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Post by Dickie Whitley »

I'm glad to see you posting again David. Still working on this, these strange "Fractions" that are associated with JI take some study. I'm getting there I guess. I've ordered the primer, so I can get a better understanding I hope.
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Post by Hook Moore »

:):):)
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Post by Larry Bell »

This is all so simple and we continue to drag it through the mud.

If your guitar SOUNDS in tune to you, as far as you can tell, it IS IN TUNE. If you can't tell the difference, it doesn't really matter. As you progress and your ear becomes more discriminating, you may choose to change the way you tune.

Find whatever it takes to get your guitar in tune, then ALWAYS DO THAT.

THERE IS NO ONE RIGHT WAY

There are recorded examples of JI (early Emmons and everybody else until electronic tuners) and ET (later Buddy Emmons, Weldon Myrick, and others). None sound objectionably out of tune to me. In my ears, this proves that different tuning systems work for different players. Personally, I tune about halfway in between as I have for almost 30 years. I would never claim this to be the only way.

FIND WHAT WORKS FOR YOU

Why do we insist that there's only one way?
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Post by Brian McGaughey »

Barry, your cage rattling brought back Mr. Doggett. Alright!

This is good...
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Post by Dickie Whitley »

Thank you Georg, I've printed out what I thought were the most important things and will be putting some hours in studying them. Very much appreciated.

On another point, Mr. Doggett, as stated previously, so glad to see you posting again. I hope you'll continue to do so on a regular basis. I enjoy your thoughtful insight.

Larry, I do agree, as with a lot of things in life, what works for you is the way to go. The same system doesn't work for everyone. Find what makes you happy and be done with it. Otherwise, you're gonna spend more time trying to tune than playing.

My 2 cents.
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?????

Post by Bobby Bowman »

I like hertz better than cents. Cents (scents) have a peculiar odor that I don't like.
Hertz just make more "sense" to me. haha!
That's my two hertz about it. :) :? 8)
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Post by CrowBear Schmitt »

Tom Bradshaw & Jeff Newman :

http://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=197268

" Would you know the evolution of Newman’s tempered tuning, when he first tuned the E’s to 440, then later revised his chart to tune the E’s to 442?”
It just so happened that I did know some of that history, but wouldn’t want anyone to think I knew everything about it.
With a much larger audience on the Forum, I decided to elaborate on the subject, getting more into the Equal Temperament vs. Just Tuning aspects as it related to Jeff’s and my activities of many years ago.

Background:
The Korg WT-10A Tuner:
Away back in the ‘70s or early ‘80s I began stocking and selling Korg’s earliest chromatic tuner, the WT-10A.
Someone turned me on to it and said it was a Godsend to steelers who had to tune so many strings, then tune the pitches needed for employing pedals and knee levers.
The Korg tuner was supposed to make it a fast work.

So when I got that tuner in my hands, I knew I had to learn how to use it.
I spent a lot of time playing with it. I did what I suspect everyone did when they got theirs.
I tuned every open string on my guitar to its assigned pitch, then each pitch for every pedal/knee lever change.
All were tuned to the zero mark (440), using the VU meter.
Wow, what a disaster. The guitar sounded awful.
At first I thought the tuner was defective. I put it aside, then re-tuned my steel in the traditional manner: by ear.

Once the steel was back in tune and I was happy with it, I wondered just how “defective” the tuner really was. I compared the readings of my now in-tune strings with what the tuner revealed them to be, and was amazed at how far the needle on the VU meter deviated from the 440 for most every pitch I needed to tune to.
I set the tuner aside and took the attitude, “To hell with that thing.”

Fortunately, I thought about the tuner a bit more. I concluded that the tuner didn’t have to be a total loss
if I could achieve a good in-tune sound by simply writing down how much the VU needle deviated from the 440 mark for each of those pitch-settings I’d established for my “good” sound.
I did that and made a chart. Also somewhere in the mix of it all, I began researching the “Just” tuning (also called Just Intonation).
I was a “red-hot” back in those days and now remember that I even went to the library (the Internet wasn’t even a word then) and found information about the Just Intonation scale.
I began to understand that I was tuning my steel to the Just Intonation scale.
I learned that even Bach had published something about it
That was when I changed my mind about the tuner’s value.
The result was my authoring of a steel player’s “Owner’s Manual” for that tuner.
Once written and printed, I supplied one with every Korg tuner I sold. I explained how users of the tuner should make up a tuning chart for their steels.
I even provided one as a guide to show how the tuning chart should look and be used.
I quickly became the biggest single seller of Korg tuners in the world. Korg told me that when one of their salesmen came to my house to learn why I was ordering so many of them!
Boy, did that inflate my ego.

Now, To Jeff and His Charts. Jeff and I were the best of friends and talked by phone often. As many know, I hosted a number of his seminars. Jeff’s wife, Fran, and my wife just loved one another, but loved going shopping even more.
They got rid of us by doing so, permitting Jeff and me to talk steel continuously,
When Jeff began publishing his “Pedal Rod” Newsletter, he also printed his recommended tuning chart.
As time passed he changed his original recommended string-pitch settings, doing so several times. Eventually he even explained why he chose to recommend tuning his E-strings to 442 Hertz.
Jeff did provide an explanation of his 442-Hertz change, but I can’t recall when he did so.

Challenging Jeff:
I began to ponder why Jeff kept changing his tuning chart recommendations.
I finally figured it out. Jeff was frequently given (or was loaned) a new pedal steel from a manufacturer.
I suspected that he would use his original chart to tune each new guitar, only to discover that his established numbers didn’t work for it.
When that thought hit me, I viewed myself as a brilliant tactician (yes I suffer from ideas of grandeur). I immediately called him and explained my theory that a different guitar required a different chart in order to sound in tune.
He paused for a moment then told me he believed I was right, and that he had thought his hearing was changing because of the aging process (I knew he was kidding, but who wouldn’t blame it on something?). I explained that every guitar was different and that players should make up their own chart for each and every brand of steel they owned.
Jeff said he would tell his students that. I don’t know if he ever did.
But let’s end that discussion and get back to the 440 vs. 442 matter:

Even though Jeff didn’t tell me this, here is what I believe (because it worked for me!). Even if Jeff got his guitar in tune, he would discover that it still wasn’t quite right when playing with a band. His guitar was still flat of their basic pitch. I believe Jeff went to a 442 Hertz level as the base point for his E strings because of the “problem” of detuning, i.e. cabinet drop. Nearly every pedal steel made at that time (and even many to this day) has cabinet drop and/or de-tunes in their individual ways. Notice that I put the word, ‘problem’, in quotes. Not all de-tuning, or cabinet drop, is a problem. But that is a subject for another time!

As I said, I felt that Jeff wasn’t in tune with the band because his guitar was still "flat" of the band’s overall pitch. I suspect that Jeff calculated the average amount of detuning (caused by cabinet drop) for his pedal steel and settled on it being 2 Hertz (8 cents). Why do I suspect this? Because I did some experimenting back then with a number of guitars myself. I came up with the 2-Hertz average detuning myself. So, I felt Jeff had discovered the same thing I did. My procedure was simple: I depressed the A & B pedals (on an E9th tuning), and watched the needle on the tuner’s VU meter move below the 440 mark. It seemed to most often settle at 438. If I re-tuned the E strings back to 440 while holding those pedals down, when I let off the pedals, the typical rise in the VU meter’s needle would bring it back to 442. I then suspected that Jeff would tune the rest of the strings (while still holding those two pedals down) to be in tune with the 442 pitch. I know I should have phoned him, but I didn’t think it was worth a call at that time. Stupid me! But to continue:

I felt Jeff compensated for an in-tune sound by tuning all the other strings and knee levers changes to be as close to “the good sound” (the Just scale) as possible, when not employing the pedals. For him, it depended on how those knee levers were used in the context of the band’s overall pitch. His compensation, regarding the knee levers, could be referred to as “tempering” those changes, while the rest of his tuning process would be in line with his wanting a “Just” tuning. Once Jeff was done, he would note the variations he got from the 440 mark on his tuner and then would prepare his chart. He shared his chart(s) with his students either at his seminars or via his Pedal Rod newsletter. I suspect that he never published the procedure by which he arrived at those numbers, but I could be wrong. I also believe that if every steel player in the world had learned his procedure away back then, they would now be tuning up quickly

Tuning Made Simple: Take the time to tune your own guitar by “ear” to be as close as you can to getting an “in tune” sound for your ears. When satisfied, make a chart of your findings and use it to quickly tune your steel. Thereafter, you should be happy by re-tuning it to your chart, even being able to do so without hearing any sounds from your guitar. And also, because most tuners have a lighted VU meter, you can do it in the dark.

If you have to tune to a band or another instrument (and those players don’t want to re-tune to your guitar), determine what their pitch level is and, using your tuner’s meter adjustment, re-tune your guitar by still using your chart. You’re then ready to rock.

A Reality: It is very important for you to “believe” that you’re playing in tune.
Let’s face it, once any steel player begins playing, he can only be happy playing if HE believes his sound is an in-tune sound.
And, we all compensate for the nuances of our great instrument by moving the bar above or below the fret lines to achieve what we hear as an in-tune sound. Whether we are playing in tune is the opinion of those who listen to us, particularly our band mates. But who gives a rats about them. We are who counts, right?

Be aware however, that if another steel player sits behind and plays your steel, or you play theirs, you both will believe that the others’ guitar is out of tune and will proceed to tweak the tuning.
I’ve seen this happen time and time again. It proves that everyone hears differently.

Jeff and My Comeuppance’s:
Once on a visit, Jeff admonished me about something I had written that he disagreed with. As I recall, he was right, so I agreed to cease printing such nonsense or agreed to publish a retraction; I can’t remember now.
However, I took that unrelated opportunity to then admonish him for telling everyone to “temper-tune” their guitars
(which implied that they were to tune to the Equal Temperament tuning).
I explained to him that steel players want the so-called “good” sound, and do so by trying to tune their guitars to a “Just” tuning scale, not an Equal Temperament scale
And incidentally, I define the Just Tuning scale as the one with all the notes and chords blending nicely, and all of those annoying “beats” between harmonizing notes are eliminated.
After arguing for a time, I finally convinced Jeff that he, and nearly all other steel players, was actually trying to tune their guitars to a JUST intonation tuning, but didn’t realize what they were doing.
[Note: If you think you can live with your guitar being tuned to an Equal Temperament scale, tune each note on it to a piano and see how happy you are with the sound. I predict that you will quickly decide that you can’t live with it sounding that far out of tune!]
I later felt good when I heard Jeff tell his students at a seminar, “The Just Tuning method is how most players tune their steels.” However, I don’t know if he ever wrote about it in any publication.

Some Concluding Thoughts and A Summation:
I suspect that when we use the word “temper” with “tuning”, we are using it in accordance with a few of its dictionary definitions.
Such definitions imply that we are “adjusting” or “altering” a tone pitch to be more in line with what sounds good to our idea of beautiful harmony. Unfortunately, that conflicts with the more prevalent assumption that we are employing the Equal Temperament tuning procedure.
What we are actually doing is trying to get our guitar to sound its best.
That sound is the Just-Tuned sound, getting as many strings tuned to the Just Intonation and blending beautifully.

When you say you “Temper Tune”; you are likely tuning every string on your guitar to 440 Hertz with a tuner.
With a few exceptions, a piano is "temper tuned", meaning that all its strings are tuned to align themselves to the “440” position on a tuner’s VU meter, a scale with the Hertz levels evenly divided within an octave.
For your guitar, the instant that you decide to tune a string flat or sharp of a tuner’s 440 reading, you are moving toward tuning it to a Just Scale and you are “Just Tuning”.

I might add that there are some electronic instruments that I've heard of that have the Just Tuning built into it, like some electric pianos. But I know of no fix-tuned instruments that are able to fully accomplish it. That is another reason that the pedal steel is unique in the tuning world.

Other Sources: There are many Internet sites that describe the Tempered and Just Tuning methods. Here’s a couple:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Just_intonation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equal_temperament
As related, my investigation of the Just Tuning led me to learn about Johan Sebastian Bach’s work and compositions called “The Well Tempered Clavier”. Some of that history can now be accessed at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Well-T ... ded_tuning

There is a YouTube video of Jeff demonstrating his Just Tuning approach on a Korg AT-12 tuner :

http://video.google.co.uk/videoplay?doc ... 3809301054#

Lastly, there are many other Internet sites that claim to explain the process of Tempered Tuning of instruments. But while they say they are “tempering” a chord or tuning, what they are really trying to do is achieve the “Just Tuning” sound from their instruments, the sound that is most pleasant to our ears.

If anything I’ve supplied here is not clear or you take exception to what I’ve said regarding the history of Jeff’s tuning charts, please feel free to disagree and scream bloody murder. Then, present your own opinion or knowledge on the subject. And while you’re at it, have a “cool” one on Jeff and me, out of any glass that’s handy. …Tom
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Bo Borland
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Post by Bo Borland »

While it may work for some, I don't believe in tuning charts or the pre programmed tuning available with some electronic tuners..

They may work ok for some players, until they play in a band situation or tune a different steel
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John De Maille
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Post by John De Maille »

When I first started to play steel, back in the middle 70's, I would tune my 4/8 strings to my 6 string guitar and tune the rest by ear. I used a "pitch pipe" and or a tuning fork to tune my 6 string acoustic, back then. But, I always had to tweek it a little, when, I played with my band. I finaly got a Korg tuner and got Jeff's original tuning chart and all was bliss. To this day, I still use Jeff's original chart and it has never failed me. I tried using his updated chart ( E's at 442 ) and it doesn't sound right to me. Again, that tuning has never failed to please.
I'm not a mathematical genius when it comes to all these tunings, but, it appears to me, that, you have to temper or adjust each string, + or - to 440, to achieve a correct sounding steel. The bridge and changer on a steel are perpendicular to the strings, whereas, on a standard guitar the nut is, but, the bridge is adjusted by saddles or physically adjusted to allow for tempering, when tuning all the strings to 440. It just seems logical to have each string to a different pitch, then, in order for them to sound pleasing to each other and to my ear on a steel.
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Post by Scott Swartz »

Violinists have the same intonation/tuning discussions, and I find it interesting to check out what they do.

There is some interesting video instruction here

http://violinmasterclass.com/intonation.php#

and quoting from that page


"Which System to Use When

Use Pythagorean Intonation most of the time, particularly for all melodies, scales, and arpeggios.

Use Just Intonation for double stops and for chords in string quartets.

Pianos are tuned in equal temperament. Violinists should only adjust to piano pitches if both instruments are playing the same pitch for a long duration."

Personally, I tune up with thirds 10 cents flat (just short of JI), but when playing single note lines I use a bit of bar movement and move toward ET, I proved this to myself by recording some stuff and checking the tuning of individual notes.
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Clete Ritta
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Post by Clete Ritta »

I personally use a different method of tuning each of the many stringed intruments I play. Each and every instrument, just like the person who tunes it, is unique. IMHO, ET is a broad but not overall pleasing temperment even mathematically (it is often slightly stretched on acoustic pianos), and especially for steel guitar, when such sweet JI sounds can be produced in an infinite number of ways!

Clete
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Post by b0b »

It (ET) is also a necessary compromise for a pedal steel guitar, where you want to have several chords that all sound in tune at every fret.
This is simply not a correct assumption. There are no chords that you need to play in tune at every fret. In E9th, we don't need to play in the key of Gb or Ab at the 3rd fret, for example. We can choose to have several related key signatures almost perfectly in tune at any given fret, and move to an adjacent fret (up or down) for another set of related key signatures.

ET makes it possible to play every major and minor chord at every fret, but the price is noticeable, annoying beats in the major and minor third intervals. If you're willing to give up half of the key signatures at each fret, every chord you play can sound a lot nicer. Think about it. Do you really need to play in G at the 4th fret on your E9th tuning? I sure don't.
Last edited by b0b on 5 Jun 2011 12:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Clete Ritta
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Post by Clete Ritta »

I think we may be missing the whole point. The beauty of the steel guitar is all the ways you can go from one chord to another with a tonebar, so that we hear every transition of string tones both raising and lowering and every in between slide. That is where the true beauty lies, in that as we play it we are constantly going out of tune on purpose!
Does that make any sense?
:lol:
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Post by Brint Hannay »

b0b wrote:
It (ET) is also a necessary compromise for a pedal steel guitar, where you want to have several chords that all sound in tune at every fret.
This is simply not a correct assumption. There are no chords that you need to play in tune at every fret. In E9th, we don't need to play in the key of Gb or Ab at the 3rd fret, for example. We can choose to have several related key signatures almost perfectly in tune at any given fret, and move to an adjacent fret (up or down) for another set of related key signatures.

ET makes it possible to play every major and minor chord at every fret, but the price is noticeable, annoying beats in the major and minor third intervals. If you're willing to give up half of the key signatures at each fret, every chord you play can sound a lot nicer. Think about it. Do you really need to play in G at the 4th fret on your E9th tuning? I sure don't.
b0b, that is marvelously clear and concise!

And that is the point precisely!

I have been sitting on and honing a draft of a much longer post wherein I made the same point, which I thought was a pretty good job of writing until I saw your post. Now I'm glad I didn't post it.

Bravo!! :D :D :D
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Post by Dickie Whitley »

OK, would it be best to say that you should tune using whatever method is best suited to your use, and concern yourself more with playing in tune than how you tune? Does that sound fair?

I'm with Larry, it seems we do debate more about the way we tune than playing in tune, although that has been a topic of debate as well.

Just my 2 cents(hertz), whatever.....
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