Hi David, Either of the first two methods you mention will work but sequences are faster than others (the third one would work but would be really slow). I'd recommend you use the sequence that gives you the most efficient muting and tuning pin sequence, which varies from one tuner to another. The sequence depends on if you are pulling out strip muting or using rubber mutes. In any case there's no need to pull up unisons literally left to right for each note if a different sequence is more efficient (as long as you generally pull up unisons as you go). I still like to strip mute the piano and pull out the strip as I go. So I let RCT sample the center string on a trichord, then pull out the strip to the left of the unison and pull up the left string of that unison, then pull up right string of the previous note/trichord. However in talking to a lot of tuners using RCT, most pitch raise with rubber mutes, either two mutes, or a single split mute. The method that is best is the one you're most comfortable with and/or fastest with. I'm faster and more comfortable with strip mutes for some reason, maybe because I tuned strictly aurally for so many years. BTW, there is a CyberTuner listserv called ctuner at reyburn.com which is free for RCT users. To subscribe: http://www.reyburn.com/lists.html Best regards, -Dean ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ RPS, Inc. contact: <http://www.reyburn.com/contact.html> Dean Reyburn, RPT 2695 Indian Lakes Road web page: <http://www.reyburn.com/> Cedar Springs, Michigan, 49319 USA Sales & support: 1-888-SOFT-440 (or 616-696-1002) Fax: 616-696-8121 On Mar 1, 2007, at 1:20 PM, David B. Stang wrote: > > I have a question about using the Reyburn Cyber Tuner in pitch- > raise mode. > The instruction booklet is not clear on this, and I realized > yesterday that the > procedure I've been using may be a little bit wrong. > > Overall, I follow the directions, i.e. I start at A0 and proceed > all the way > up from left to right. The question is what to do at each > particular note. > > Here's what I have been doing (on a 3-string unison): > > 1. Mute the center and right string. > 2. Play note (left string only) and allow RCT to sample it. > 3. Tune left string to the RCT. > 4. Mute right string only and aurally tune center string to left. > (Or, mute left and right and tune center to RCT) > 5. Un-mute and tune right to center and left. > (Or, mute left and center and tune right to RCT) > > I realized that this is probably better: > > 1. Play note unmuted (all 3 strings) and allow RCT to sample. > 2. Tune the strings to RCT as above. > > ( Here's another procedure which is probably silly: > 1. Mute center and right. > 2. Play left note and allow RCT to sample it > 3. Tune left string to RCT > 4. Mute left and right. > 5. Press 'backspace' to erase previous sample. > 6. Play center note and allow RCT to sample it. > etc.) > > The first procedure uses only the left string to sample and find > the overpull; > the second procedure uses the average (presumably) of the three > strings. > Clearly it doesn't make any difference if all 3 strings are equally > flat, > but if the left is significantly flatter than the others, the > calculated > overpull may be too much. (& vice-versa). > > Or, am I concerned about something that doesn't make a hill-o-beans > difference? > > Thanks > David B. Stang > Columbus, Ohio
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