Thanks for the video, I was trying to find a good video about the eclipse on bass. I usually check with the octave, and have been leaning on the “close enough for rock” idea but I guess I’ll have to get a real tuner eventually
These things are cheap and small enough it’s hard to not recommend it. Especially if you do any sort of recording. If your low string’s slightly flat at a show you’ll forget and move on, but if it’s on tape you’ll always cringe every time you hear it!
@@jdriffsreviews9723 yeah I’ll get a legit strobe tuner sometime soon but I’m glad to know this one is good enough for bar shows and practice. Since I don’t have to worry about any serious recording right now. I hope you can get more views as well, we need more people making these kind of concise but thorough reviews. Instead of the 20-30 minute shred compilations some channels make
Is there any change in setting / switch for different instruments like Bass / Guitar? Or does it just recognize the vibrations of the strings regardless of the instrument?
If it's like my older version, it allows you to tune to different frequencies. Default setting is standard concert pitch at 440 Hz (Hertz) but I've used mine to experiment with 332 Hz.
Yes you can. I use it pretty frequently to tune my acoustic to Db/C#. It does seem to work by notating the flats as well, so you’ll see Eb as opposed to D#
Best review of this tuner I have seen thus far. Thank you for the thorough review.
Thanks bro, great review! Finally a comparison to get an idea about the accuracy of this clip tuners.
Thanks for the video, I was trying to find a good video about the eclipse on bass. I usually check with the octave, and have been leaning on the “close enough for rock” idea but I guess I’ll have to get a real tuner eventually
These things are cheap and small enough it’s hard to not recommend it. Especially if you do any sort of recording. If your low string’s slightly flat at a show you’ll forget and move on, but if it’s on tape you’ll always cringe every time you hear it!
@@jdriffsreviews9723 yeah I’ll get a legit strobe tuner sometime soon but I’m glad to know this one is good enough for bar shows and practice. Since I don’t have to worry about any serious recording right now.
I hope you can get more views as well, we need more people making these kind of concise but thorough reviews. Instead of the 20-30 minute shred compilations some channels make
Is there any change in setting / switch for different instruments like Bass / Guitar? Or does it just recognize the vibrations of the strings regardless of the instrument?
suggestion to give a proper conclusion
4:05 even a problem with a Peterson tuner???
Nexxus 360 is smaller. Is the eclipse better?
Led vs lcd for nexxus. I have the eclipse, I think I should have gotten the nexxus
@ thanks. Thinking of getting the Peterson strobe hdc
Had one for maybe a year ... batteries go out on them right? Where can I buy a new battery?
They can die yes and your local walmart should carry em and if not amazon will.
What is the two arrow up and dow do?
If it's like my older version, it allows you to tune to different frequencies. Default setting is standard concert pitch at 440 Hz (Hertz) but I've used mine to experiment with 332 Hz.
Can you use that clip on tuner for Eb tunings?
Yes you can. I use it pretty frequently to tune my acoustic to Db/C#. It does seem to work by notating the flats as well, so you’ll see Eb as opposed to D#
It doesn’t show the correct notes for my bass guitar
Can it tune acoustic guitar
Yes, I use it for mine frequently, especially when recording
Thanks for this.
You forget calibrate frequncy
why doesn't D'Addario tell us to take the film off the front?
Just like Fender don't tell you to take the film off the pickguard!
Clip on tuners are for acoustic instruments(.)
Clip tuners are for instruments that need to be tuned …
You're probably trolling. But in case you actually believe what you said, they are in fact for both electric and acoustic.