ETD's accurate?

Richard Brekne Richard.Brekne@grieg.uib.no
Tue, 17 Sep 2002 23:48:09 +0200


I like Rons point better :)

Tho Antares is my good buddy, and I respect him and his abilitities to the nth
degree, I must say that tuning is a creative endeavour. And the day it stops being
one is the day you might as well be playing a Clavinova. No matter how good the
machine is, its not capable of creativity.

Cheers
RicB

antares wrote:

> OK, a simple answer to a complicated question :
>
> I have used the Verituner now intensively for about 1.5 year.
> This ETD 'gives' such a perfect tuning - every time - on all pianos, old,
> new, beautiful, ugly, that I know that I never have to check whether it lies
> or not.
> I think the difficulty with ETD's, but also with tuning in general, has to
> do with tuning technique.
> If you don't know how to turn a tuning pin properly than tuning with or
> without ETD's is useless.
> I have learned to make a rock steady tuning, my precious Verituner does the
> rest.
> For those who have never tried a Verituner :
> one tuning with this VT and you no longer have any doubts, nor do your
> customers.
>

--
Richard Brekne
RPT, N.P.T.F.
UiB, Bergen, Norway
mailto:rbrekne@broadpark.no
http://home.broadpark.no/~rbrekne/ricmain.html



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