[CAUT] Barbie tuner

Chris Solliday csolliday at rcn.com
Sat Jul 26 06:59:12 MDT 2008


Jim,
I'll be happy to send you a SAT lll brochure to give to whomever. Maybe if they compare specs on paper, visually, they'll note the difference.
Chris Solliday
Accu-tuner dealer
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jim Busby 
  To: College and University Technicians 
  Sent: Saturday, July 26, 2008 8:38 AM
  Subject: Re: [CAUT] Barbie tuner


  Interesting!

   

  I simply used both the SAT and the Verituner to read A4 as did he with his Barbie toy. I really don't know what his toy reads, nor exactly what both my ETDs read, but what I do know is that both my ETDs read the one piano right on A440 and the other at A443 (Right where I tuned them) and his BT read that BOTH pianos were at A442!  I don't know if partial/inharmonicity can account for that much discrepancy or not. 

   

  Or.. Maybe his $25.00 toy is just a piece of crap which should be never see the light of day, and I can suggest where that is  ;-)  (That's my 10 year old ego speaking, from the heart.)

   

  Let's see what  happens today. I've had several performers say they loved the pianos, but as usual, I try to tune according to my best experience/knowledge while trying to take into account that most feedback, good and bad, should be taken with a grain of salt. Sometimes the bad needs a bit more salt!

   

  Regards,

  Jim

   

  From: caut-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Kendall Ross Bean
  Sent: Friday, July 25, 2008 9:58 PM
  To: 'College and University Technicians'
  Subject: Re: [CAUT] Barbie tuner

   

  Jim~

   

  I just had an inspiration!

   

  You could both be right! (-now don't lose me here...this is important) :

   

  Which partial was the oboe player listening to? And you! Which partial were you tuning to? (Uh huh, I thought so!)

   

  You see! It IS possible. It's spelled I..N..H..A..R..M..O..N..I...C...I...T...Y...

   

  Did you know that oboe tone is closest to a pure sine wave? And that pure sine waves are most always perceived as flat? (Oh yes, -most 'specially by piano tooners)

   

  Just go read Harvey Fletcher.

   

  ;-)

   

  ~Kendall Ross Bean

   


------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: Jim Busby [mailto:jim_busby at byu.edu] 
  Sent: Friday, July 25, 2008 2:34 PM
  To: College and University Technicians
  Subject: [CAUT] Barbie tuner

  List,

   

  I won't name the fellow, but at the International Double Reed Society conference here at BYU there is this "oboist" who is running around with this tiny guitar tuner complaining that all the instruments are off. He confronted me before one of his performances saying that the pitch of the Shigeru was not A440 but was A442. He said the Hamburg D was also A442 (Was supposed to be at A443). I told him I was confident the pitch was where it was supposed to be on both instruments and that maybe his small tuner was off. BAD thing to say! Boy was he mad! After his performance, when most the people were gone, the head honcho watched me measure the pianos. Less than 4/10ths of one cent off. (Dang! Will I ever learn to keep my pitch dead on?)

   

  Funny, but almost all his high notes were extremely flat. Or maybe I'm just dreaming.

   

  Jim Busby

   

  p.s. Other than this unfortunate experience everyone else is very nice and complimentary. 
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