Are All Guitar Tuners The Same?

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  • Опубліковано 18 сер 2019
  • It's the ultimate showdown, are all tuners the same? Should you buy a pedal over a clip-on? Do you need a strobe tuner? Can you use a cheap tuner? Are mini pedals less accurate than bigger ones?! Check out all the pedals used below:
    Check out all our Guitar Tuners! | tinyurl.com/228lrdgh
    Snark Silver 2 Clip-On All Instrument Tuner in Red | tinyurl.com/2y68rydg
    TC Electronic UniTune Clip-On Tuner | tinyurl.com/2247vxbh
    TC Electronic PolyTune 3 Mini in White | tinyurl.com/27jewd8b
    Check out all our Peterson Tuners! | tinyurl.com/28x9z98k
    TC Electronic PolyTune 3 Tuner Pedal (w/ Bonafide Buffer) | tinyurl.com/244l9fb8
    Landlord FX Lock In Guitar Tuner Pedal | tinyurl.com/26xhpyf8
    Boss TU-3 Compact Chromatic Tuner Pedal | tinyurl.com/22omttl9
    Check out all our Korg Tuners! | tinyurl.com/2d2nrmhw
    BOSS TU-3W Waza Chromatic Tuner | tinyurl.com/2bkqu3kq
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    #GuitarTuners #GuitarPedals #AndertonsTV

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,8 тис.

  • @aescleahs
    @aescleahs 4 роки тому +1928

    I'm pretty amazed I just watched 20 mins of guitar tuning...

    • @celticbattlepants
      @celticbattlepants 4 роки тому +181

      Like some local gigs I have been to.

    • @derpimusmaximus8815
      @derpimusmaximus8815 4 роки тому +41

      @@celticbattlepantsLocal gigs where a guy has just bought his first Floyd Rose.....
      /wrists

    • @carlitoxb110
      @carlitoxb110 4 роки тому +16

      I'm used to 20 minutes tuning my damn cheap guitar 🙄

    • @celticbattlepants
      @celticbattlepants 4 роки тому +5

      @@derpimusmaximus8815 haha yes! And all the gain, and none of the mids

    • @aescleahs
      @aescleahs 4 роки тому +10

      @wahmsi I would...but it's not in tune ;)

  • @thomasraven
    @thomasraven 4 роки тому +573

    For the first time ever, I can actually play everything Pete plays in the video.

  • @EclecticHillbilly
    @EclecticHillbilly 3 роки тому +147

    This reminds me of the old joke..........."A man with one watch always knows what time it is; a man with two is never sure"

    • @esl4058
      @esl4058 2 роки тому +2

      lol brilliant

  • @alexledford4747
    @alexledford4747 4 роки тому +445

    Send a 440hz Sine wave through and see if all the tuners recognize it as "A"!

    • @zakofrx
      @zakofrx 4 роки тому +12

      I wonder how much the cheap ones they showed were correct compared to the least accurate by using a wide tolerance.

    • @Markle2k
      @Markle2k 4 роки тому +23

      They (the BOSSes) don't disagree on the A string, which is a whole number multiple/divisor of 440 hz (220 hz). Or on the Es and D, which is closest to an integer ratio in 12-tone Equal Temperament. It's with the B and G which are a whole tone off the octave. But those are the second-most consonant (relative to just intonation) intervals in 12-TET after the fifth and the fourth (E and D). It's like they aren't programmed with just quite the correct interval. The generic chip found in random cheap chinese tuners seems to be much better in this regard. They just let down in build quality or display.

    • @gortanek
      @gortanek 4 роки тому +1

      Also tuner Apps are good to check.

    • @BibleStorm
      @BibleStorm 4 роки тому +13

      Yeah, this is a seriously badly designed experiment. The guitar is too variable. A 440Hz sin wave is not variable.

    • @chrisbobpete
      @chrisbobpete 4 роки тому +28

      @@BibleStorm Why would you care how a guitar tuner performs outside of the scope of a guitar? Unless you're planning on playing sine waves instead of guitars sometime soon this seems to get the point across. This is what tuning with these tuners is ACTUALLY like.

  • @vitorisaia
    @vitorisaia 4 роки тому +794

    Everytime I tune my guitars my wife says 'you always play the same song'

    • @charliepayne9248
      @charliepayne9248 4 роки тому +18

      Ha...! That made me chuckle, good one...

    • @fredfragniere
      @fredfragniere 4 роки тому +6

      Ahaha true story

    • @petruccirocks02
      @petruccirocks02 4 роки тому +8

      Vitor Isaia My girlfriend says the same thing!! 😂

    • @eriknarez524
      @eriknarez524 4 роки тому +17

      Why do you always play "Nothing Else Matters"?

    • @vitorisaia
      @vitorisaia 4 роки тому

      @@eriknarez524 HAHAHA

  • @billyellow4849
    @billyellow4849 4 роки тому +1032

    It's a fact that if we tune so the E chord sounds perfect, the G chord does not and so on. That's why digital tuners are a good idea for most situations. It's because equal temperament (what tuners use) is based on dividing octaves into 12 equal steps, whereas our ears prefer the higher pitched strings to coincide with the harmonic overtones of the lower strings. And natural harmonics and overtones are close to but not exactly the same as, notes tuned to the nearest semitone.

    • @semikolon6440
      @semikolon6440 4 роки тому +54

      Needs more upvotes! Wish it was mentioned here. Paul Davids did a great video on that subject

    • @mrbluez2898
      @mrbluez2898 4 роки тому +4

      absolutely true,

    • @shaft9000
      @shaft9000 4 роки тому +31

      It's that bloody B-string, which has to be somewhat sharp in relation to the 4 lower strings in order to modulate key. You can mitigate the open-G going sharp from fretting at fret1 with a zero-fret in place of a nut, but the major 3rd of the sharp B-string will still rear it's equal-tempered head. The stridency (sharpness) of the minor 3rd vs Just Intonation gives a guitar that ambiguity between major and minor that it exploits better than anything else; most easily heard in blues leads.

    • @DIDCHOI
      @DIDCHOI 4 роки тому +16

      Was about to comment this, but here it is. Glad the internet has some people that know about tuning

    • @campbelltron
      @campbelltron 4 роки тому +2

      +

  • @BluesPower74
    @BluesPower74 4 роки тому +553

    Top tip for tuning with pedal tuners. Use the neck pickup and roll the tone off. The signal will have less harmonics and you can tune more quickly. Don't forget to turn the tone up afterwards!

    • @sergutiov
      @sergutiov 4 роки тому +32

      Steve Preston my guitar doesn’t have a neck pickup nor a tone knob

    • @adrrob7106
      @adrrob7106 4 роки тому +68

      @@sergutiov too bad for you

    • @superbford
      @superbford 4 роки тому +3

      Absolutely. Same way I tune Steve....

    • @sparkyguitar0058
      @sparkyguitar0058 4 роки тому +2

      @@sergutiov Guess you can't tune up. Do you use a clip-on in that case then?

    • @sergutiov
      @sergutiov 4 роки тому

      sparkyguitar 00 i use a polytune 3 pedal haha 😂

  • @tommawson1119
    @tommawson1119 3 роки тому +45

    Tabs would be great!

  • @bradtapolcsanyi5930
    @bradtapolcsanyi5930 4 роки тому +623

    This is the pedal board i need.

    • @theblindsniper
      @theblindsniper 4 роки тому +30

      Then add a Miku at the end!

    • @krisberntzen
      @krisberntzen 4 роки тому +3

      You could also try new strings once in a while 🤔

    • @davidkastin4240
      @davidkastin4240 4 роки тому +1

      Lofl 😆

    • @bluesound666
      @bluesound666 4 роки тому +2

      Great idea for pedalboard, each tuner for different pitch 😏

    • @commentfreely5443
      @commentfreely5443 4 роки тому +2

      if humans can only hear to 10 cents how can electronic tuners not be more specific?

  • @rockstardr
    @rockstardr 4 роки тому +252

    There's a lifetime of guitar frustration on display here ......

    • @jayjayripoff
      @jayjayripoff 4 роки тому +3

      Oh yes, yes there is... I have always thought the same...

    • @commentfreely5443
      @commentfreely5443 4 роки тому +10

      hit E string
      hit whammy bar
      repeat for 1 hour

  • @midtown3221
    @midtown3221 3 роки тому +52

    I do not regret spending over 19 minutes just on tuners. This is very important to me and I REALLY needed to know this. Guys, thank you very much!

  • @busterrabbit
    @busterrabbit 4 роки тому +185

    Aren't you supposed to always tune "upwards"? That is even if the string is slightly sharp, you drop it flat and then increase tension until it's in tune?

    • @peecmkr45
      @peecmkr45 4 роки тому

      understanding.

    • @jameshill2015
      @jameshill2015 4 роки тому +10

      If this is NESSESARY..your strings are not moving freely through your nut most likely, or perhaps the angle from the nut to the tuning peg is too extreme to allow it to move freely because of the friction created from the angle in which case keeping that guitar tuned will always be an issue.. Epiphone Les Paul guitars have better tuning stability than Gibson Les Paul guitars for this very reason.. Check your nut the next time you change strings and drag the old string moderately through the nut groove of that string..it should slide through easily. If not use the string like a file and run it it back and forth on the nut groove for that string just once or twice being you dont want to cut the nut groove deeper, just enough to clear it. Factories typically do not do the lil things and this is a VERY common problem...you may need a proper nut file for strings not wound. Try a very small bit of lube in the groove. Good luck

    • @lyonsson6480
      @lyonsson6480 4 роки тому +13

      Not as big a deal with locking tuners as there is very little string wound around the post but for the most part yes.

    • @lyonsson6480
      @lyonsson6480 4 роки тому +8

      James Hill brings up a good point about friction at the nut, but a big deal is the amount of wraps around the tuning machines. Tuning down can cause them to slacken, then settle later. Since locking tuners don’t need all those wraps, tuning down isn’t such a big deal.

    • @tusharjamwal
      @tusharjamwal 4 роки тому +1

      This is mostly an issue of backlash in the worm wheel system. accurate worm wheel systems will not have this issue to a degree that you can feel it.

  • @dsholt
    @dsholt 4 роки тому +58

    This video actually has made me feel better about my own struggles to keep my guitar in tune.

  • @geroffmilan3328
    @geroffmilan3328 4 роки тому +181

    Ah, the constant battle of 12-tone even temperament vs the uniformly-fretted string instrument :)
    It'll never be perfect, sadly.

    • @orlock20
      @orlock20 4 роки тому +6

      Pianos are purposely wrong, yet many singers learn to sing their notes using a piano which might not match any other instrument on the planet.

    • @MrGul
      @MrGul 4 роки тому +5

      True Temperament frets are pretty damn close, though.

    • @bluejavelina5335
      @bluejavelina5335 4 роки тому +5

      @@orlock20 barbershop quartets have no limits!! in-tune gods and shave and a hair cut

    • @orlock20
      @orlock20 4 роки тому

      @@bluejavelina5335 They learn to harmonize with each other, but few use instruments when doing the performance.

    • @bluejavelina5335
      @bluejavelina5335 4 роки тому +5

      @@orlock20 yeah thats what im saying , the guy doing the major 3rd of the chord can be 2 cents flat and it will sound better for it. and fifths sound better 2 cents sharp etc.. edit: "or girl"

  • @nohomatt6559
    @nohomatt6559 Рік тому +24

    An old trick is if you’re recording a song in E don’t tune the guitar EADGBE instead hold the E chord and tune each note of the chord. Anytime you tune you’re only tuning the note of that open string and the moment you press it down it will be a little out of tune because the amount of pressure you apply will be sightly different every time.

  • @ChiChisALaPar
    @ChiChisALaPar 4 роки тому +7

    0:30 the symmetry, the perfection of that throw. Heavenly!

  • @mr.banana4893
    @mr.banana4893 4 роки тому +112

    I remember reading an interview, about 25 years ago, or so, with Alex Lifeson from Rush. The question of staying in tune came up, considering his choice of complex chords. He stated that, he always starts of with a tuner and chosing the neck pickup because it catches closest to the wider part of the string vibrating, and would tune the strings. He would then tune the guitar to itself. He would hold chords, and tune the chords. Using three or four different chords along the neck and tune to the guitars idiosyncrasies. Making sure he would tune first and sixth strings to the tuner if they went off. And tune the rest to the chords he liked to use. He would go back and forth between the chords until they sounded right. Ever since then, I use the same method, with great results. If you've been playing long enough you just naturally know how the chords are supposed to sound like.
    Give it a try.

    • @KidNato
      @KidNato 4 роки тому +37

      I just tried it. Didn't work, I still don't sound anything like Alex Lifeson

    • @composerdave68
      @composerdave68 4 роки тому +2

      Tuning for what you are playing is a good idea on the guitar. If you are going to be playing a lot of open chords, tune for the best tuning in that position. if you are going to play higher chord forms up the neck, tune for that region. It is my understanding that this is what EVH does. He loves those chord shapes around the middle of the neck, especially those where the third is on the B string, so he tunes for those to be most in tune. He likes his third a little flat so he tunes the B a little flat.

    • @mr.banana4893
      @mr.banana4893 4 роки тому +3

      @@KidNato lol, neither do I, but I can still dream.

    • @Deebz270
      @Deebz270 4 роки тому +1

      For most of my playing over the past 30/40 years, I've tuned my ear, to tune to the root of whatever tune I was playing along too. Given that tuning stability was all over the place in some recordings, or even diliberately out (Page), this was the best way of getting in tune with the artist/recording. But this technique started when I was around six or seven, when I first started playing the recorder at school and for the following years up to 17 (on obtaining my first guitar), the recorder and occasionally the piano were my only instruments. I have always been able to play music by ear and of course to always know when someone/something was out of tune.
      My ears *had* perfect pitch, they still are pretty accurate, despite the years, but I learned to do the same as Alex as my competency grew. Now, I do use tuners (one clip-on and the onboard tuners of the Pod and TC-E processor... Which appears the most accurate and easier to use, for me..). But I still tune initially by ear and then cross-refer to one of the E-tuners, then I tune the guitar to open chords. This is a constant process often. And of course all guitars have differing tuning characteristics.

    • @doctersound9630
      @doctersound9630 Рік тому +1

      He (Alex) needs to tune so much to adjust for “Using Gibsons” - #Gstring 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Wildledroses
    @Wildledroses 4 роки тому +100

    I was given a tip a long time ago that when you tune your guitar you should hit the strings as hard as you normally play, that way the pitch is correct. It really does help

    • @CorrosionAudio
      @CorrosionAudio 4 роки тому +10

      Also if you play heavier stuff where you're really chugging on the bottom strings a lot, turn the tone down and keep hitting the string as you tune. That way it'll be in tune all the time you're playing like you normally do.

    • @mikaso
      @mikaso 4 роки тому +10

      Amen to that: "keep hitting the string as you tune"

    • @WillyPDX94
      @WillyPDX94 4 роки тому +9

      That's a good tip. For years I just lightly pecked at strings while tuning, then wondered why when I robustly strummed a chord it didn't sound right. So, like you, I learned to hit the string not hard, but with a firm stroke to get the best reading. Of course, when we're actually playing the guitar, we're not always striking the strings with the same force because we need dynamics in our playing.

    • @shaft9000
      @shaft9000 4 роки тому +4

      it depends on your string tension, too. A big advantage of heavier gauge is less going-sharp in the initial transient. Playing 9s and 10s - especially with a heavy hand - is always going to 'wonk' the pitch sharp by 5-15cents over the first 50-100milliseconds of the note.
      This is partly why the buzz feiten system only works with specific gauge and scale of guitar.

    • @FacePomagranate
      @FacePomagranate 4 роки тому

      Yep, guitar strings will get sharper as you hit harder, and they'll also go flat as they sustain. Also make sure that you have the guitar in playing position, rather than laying on a table, because gravity affects it too - probably wouldn't do that at a show, but I can see someone doing that after a string change.

  • @seanandben
    @seanandben 4 роки тому +34

    Having used a lot of tuners over the years, from Peterson's to Boss and Korg etc., I've found that it's important to pick the strings when tuning the same way - (or close) - to the way you pick the strings when you're playing, otherwise you'll definitely be out of tune when you "attack" the strings while you're playing in a gig situation. Just my own personal experience, and most tuners are not "perfect".

  • @superbford
    @superbford 4 роки тому +12

    I generally get the best results with any tuner that you are plugged into by rolling down the tone all the way and using the neck pickup and making sure to always tune UP to the correct pitch.. that way you are tightening the tension as you reach the pitch.

  • @SteveBjorck
    @SteveBjorck 4 роки тому +162

    Actually more interesting that I expected. It would have been interesting to send a sine wave through at a known pitch to see how accurate they were before testing them on a guitar.

    • @NyneForte
      @NyneForte 4 роки тому +2

      That's a great idea

    • @psicopsiamusic
      @psicopsiamusic 4 роки тому +2

      Turbo tuner, not shown here, is the most accurate...

    • @numanuma20
      @numanuma20 4 роки тому +2

      Nyne Forte yes.

    • @e.gamauf5686
      @e.gamauf5686 4 роки тому

      Too logical. 🥴

    • @TimurIskhodzhanov
      @TimurIskhodzhanov 3 роки тому

      Define "known pitch". How do you know the quartz in your computer is accurate? :)

  • @danieldennehy3604
    @danieldennehy3604 4 роки тому +71

    Me: I'm going to do something productive today.
    Also me: oh a 20 min video of people tuning a guitar

    • @squirelova1815
      @squirelova1815 3 роки тому +2

      Why isn't that productive? I's IMPORTANT! You did good. Real good.

    • @catsmeow971
      @catsmeow971 3 роки тому

      Hahaha

  • @eddievongrape2177
    @eddievongrape2177 4 роки тому +29

    When my Boss tuner says I’m in tune, I test it against the rest of my band and could swear that it sounds a little flat. It drives me bonkers. At least I know now that it’s not just me. This was a very informative video :)

    • @elwrongo
      @elwrongo 2 роки тому +4

      make sure its set to 440khz. may need a reset

  • @charliewesley94
    @charliewesley94 4 роки тому +33

    "It's interesting, isnt' it? No. It's the most boring video we've ever done but it's informative." Lol

  • @christurner2398
    @christurner2398 4 роки тому +361

    Clearly these tuners are made out of different tonewoods...:p

    • @Darm0k
      @Darm0k 4 роки тому +41

      Tunewoods.

    • @philswhite1
      @philswhite1 4 роки тому +4

      Extra points for that

    • @nitegoat1369
      @nitegoat1369 4 роки тому +7

      Clearly these tuners are all made by Gibson; which is why they will not tune a guitar.

    • @christurner2398
      @christurner2398 4 роки тому +5

      @@nitegoat1369 Tune authentic.

    • @lostandalone3096
      @lostandalone3096 4 роки тому +1

      But the best ones are made of Richlite.

  • @PaintballingPete
    @PaintballingPete 4 роки тому +51

    Actually laughed out loud at the more tuna than a sushi place joke.

    • @RARenfield
      @RARenfield 4 роки тому +2

      He made this video just to use that line.

  • @user-bz2uw2wf3v
    @user-bz2uw2wf3v 10 місяців тому +7

    2:22 Boss TU
    3:43 Korg Pitchblack
    4:37 Boss TU-3
    5:05 Cheap pedal
    5:45 TC Electronic Polytune
    7:53 Peterson
    8:32 TC Electronics Polytune Mini

    • @user-bz2uw2wf3v
      @user-bz2uw2wf3v 10 місяців тому

      Awesome video! The Fender tuner could have been a nice addition to the episode, a popular tuning pedal. Also, the Artec Big Dots.

  • @mattv2635
    @mattv2635 4 роки тому +31

    I’m an audio engineer and in the recording studio we use Peterson strobe units almost exclusively. Every band that comes in gets a recommendation for our favorite guitar tech to intonate their guitars, and a little lesson on using the strobe tuner! Peterson has a phone app that’s also amazing.
    They are tougher to use playing live though

    • @chipsterb4946
      @chipsterb4946 3 роки тому

      Thanks! I’ve been going back and forth between the Peterson Strobo Stomp, Turbo Tuner ST 300, and the Peterson “strap-on” tuner as the Captain would call it. If the phone app works well, I’ll get the clip on. I have an old, huge VT-2 that provides a sweetened temperament for guitar that sound much better to my ears than equal temperament. Peterson has different temperaments for electric, acoustic, 12 string ... something like 50 custom tunings.

    • @canadiancombatwombatthe3rd782
      @canadiancombatwombatthe3rd782 Рік тому

      Their end result is so much nicer though, worth dialing your guitars in with them.

  • @kensommerville
    @kensommerville 4 роки тому +25

    one way you could compare different tuners would be to use a sine wave tone coming from a synth and see if the tuners register differently.

  • @cornelius5595
    @cornelius5595 4 роки тому +17

    I appreciate that someone else has suffered along with me when the tuner says I'm good but something sounds off.

  • @christophergregory1205
    @christophergregory1205 4 роки тому +10

    You guys even managed to make a tuner episode enjoyable.
    God, I love this channel. 😂

  • @andreaferrero6533
    @andreaferrero6533 4 роки тому +12

    Important: if you play while standing, tune while standing, because the pressure on the neck of the strap changes the tuning

    • @Uygkuyfkutfkytfkutfv
      @Uygkuyfkutfkytfkutfv Місяць тому

      Thanks Joni Mitchell, but I think the majority of us are on electric.

  • @neck5566
    @neck5566 4 роки тому +39

    I would be very interested in seeing another video where you take multiples of the same tuner and compare them to see if they all match.

    • @joguipo
      @joguipo 4 роки тому +1

      Neck... I was just thinking the exact same thing. Cheers!

    • @davidluna3209
      @davidluna3209 4 роки тому

      Same here.

    • @ASJerrell
      @ASJerrell 4 роки тому

      Neck these tuners being digital, the differences would be incredibly low if not nonexistent. Ones with a minimal display wouldn’t even show it.
      Analog tuners would be a different story! But those can be calibrated.

  • @modularcuriosity
    @modularcuriosity 4 роки тому +35

    "Are Human Ears More Accurate?" Years of playing and listening to bands live seem to be pretty strong evidence of "No". ;-)

    • @shaft9000
      @shaft9000 4 роки тому +2

      Train your ear with unaccompanied vocal practice for a year or so and that answer will change. In fact the human voice is typically the only instrument that CAN be in perfect tune in any key. Check out some doo-wop or a capella jazz for real-world examples of this.

    • @madcockney
      @madcockney 4 роки тому +1

      Years gone by when piano tuners were human beings, many were blind as they had really good ears, They would tune to a note, and then play chords, etc and adjust accordingly so it sounded right.

    • @ktfjulien
      @ktfjulien 4 роки тому

      @@madcockney Just because they existed doesn't mean they were better than electronic tuners

    • @madcockney
      @madcockney 4 роки тому +1

      @@ktfjulien I didn't say that the human piano tuners were better.

  • @ThFatty
    @ThFatty 3 роки тому +1

    This is a great video. I agree with Pete. It didn't really sound in tune until after the using the Polytune. Then the E chord sounded in tune. Thanks guys!

  • @lifeanddecay
    @lifeanddecay 4 роки тому +21

    every drummer's favorite jam

  • @bryang4838
    @bryang4838 4 роки тому +26

    This would have been a perfect opportunity to bring in a true temperament guitar!

  • @OGPokey151
    @OGPokey151 4 роки тому +7

    Thank you Pete and Captain. It was actually very informative.

  • @Fuff63
    @Fuff63 Рік тому +3

    Enjoyed this and well worth the time. NOT boring - quite funny and entertaining. Thank you. It also underscores what live band guitarists have to put up with on stage. Factor in fast moving song sets, time constraints, temperature fluctuations, weather etc., and it’s a true marvel that anyone sounds right. Guitars are living breathing instruments.consisting of organic materials. Naturally, it is a going to present a serious challenge. Cheers.

  • @Skytalker777
    @Skytalker777 4 роки тому

    You are a great team together. This was again a very interesting and enlightening video. Thank you.

  • @hukl3945
    @hukl3945 4 роки тому +23

    Actually all tuners have slight differences which is coming from the tolerances of the components in their circuit. Which is why in the studio you want to have all the instruments tuned through the same tuner.

    • @OverMotoren
      @OverMotoren 4 роки тому

      If they were mechanical then I would agree. However, they're digital.... so I'm having a hard time.

    • @hukl3945
      @hukl3945 4 роки тому +7

      @@OverMotoren Well digital works based off analog components. Clocks for example are varying a lot between computers - set up 3 computers without internet access and observe their clocks for an hour - they will drift significantly. The frequency in a computer comes from a quartz crystal and they have huge tolerances - up to 30% are not rare. There are similar principals for "generating" the reference pitch. If it was all digital then the tuners would have to sample / digitize your input signal, for which you'd need a precise clock, which tuners most likely won't have. Even if you ignore all that. Different tuners come with different accuracy some are 0.1 cents some are 0.01 cents or even more these days. So you are guaranteed to get different results from tuners with different accuracy - if you want to know why they have different accuracy you can follow up my explanations with some research of your own into computers, clocks and such :) Enjoy!

    • @OverMotoren
      @OverMotoren 4 роки тому +3

      Love it. I'm not gonna argue a single bit.

    • @vechap
      @vechap 4 роки тому

      @@hukl3945 That's why you synch computer time to NIST!

    • @brianrichardson5310
      @brianrichardson5310 4 роки тому +4

      hukl, NO! Try 30ppm for a bog standard crystal. That's 0.003%. 30% is 18 minutes per hour. Is your computer really that crap? 0.003% is, I expect, inaudible to humans, so I doubt the tolerances in a digital tuner are audible.

  • @zloboslav_
    @zloboslav_ 4 роки тому +10

    I have the older boss tu-2 and in my experience the best results are when you tune fast and pick several times so you tune the attack of the note since it's always the sharpest of the whole note. :)

    • @elwrongo
      @elwrongo 2 роки тому

      I found the TU2 slow to wake up and slow to tune. TU3 much faster

  • @benralphs5680
    @benralphs5680 2 роки тому

    I'm amazed!!! I've watched the entire video because my dad mentioned that his boss tuner just didn't seem to tune as tightly as other tuners we use (TC one, Korg pedal, Mooer tuner) impressed with landlord one

  • @TheFarout69
    @TheFarout69 3 роки тому +2

    I've got blurry vision and play outdoors during daytime on occasion. I've been through several. I presently have the Korg custom shop tuner pedal with the green and blue 3D display. I can see the bugger! In daylight, at dark, from across the room at angles. I'm hooked on it. Accuracy seems perfect, even with the band.

  • @KarlosAlvarado
    @KarlosAlvarado 4 роки тому +4

    Great video, very useful for me, I was looking for reviews about the subject

  • @sevenity2677
    @sevenity2677 4 роки тому

    Cool vid guys. I was shocked how good the stag and clip ins were good. Love the black tuner also

  • @KevinBlank
    @KevinBlank 4 роки тому +2

    The Peterson clip on tuners have a "Sweetened Tunings" settings based on the instrument, it will slightly tune up or down per string to compensate for temperament. I love mine.

  • @jonesisdying
    @jonesisdying 4 роки тому +4

    Best thing you've done in ages - genuinely interesting!

  • @ScottJamesHicks
    @ScottJamesHicks 4 роки тому +3

    I just learned that a super tight strap-on will improve your pitch. Thank you Andertons UK 🇬🇧.

  • @DerSchlechteChirurg
    @DerSchlechteChirurg 4 роки тому +2

    The playing is absolutely on point in this!

  • @truthorhappiness
    @truthorhappiness 2 роки тому +15

    You need to tune the guitar through each string at least 2-3 times. The reason is because the neck has a little bit of flex in it. As you tune each string, the others are affected ever so slightly. The pitch eventually converges to a tuned state for all strings. This isn't an issue with the tuner, it's the guitar. Some guitars have this effect more than others depending on the hardness of the wood, length of the neck, construction quality, etc.

    • @PANICBLADE
      @PANICBLADE 2 роки тому +1

      Completely correct, even more so with whammy bridges because the springs have to find equilibrium as well. Also depends on the kind/tension of strings.

  • @TheArtyBartfast
    @TheArtyBartfast 4 роки тому +3

    I agree 100% - I eventually ended up buying matching tuners for everybody in all of the bands I was in most recently. Four different 4 member bands each ended up making m wallet lighter - but my ears thanked me!

  • @Module79L
    @Module79L 4 роки тому +5

    0:45 - I solved that problem years ago: both me and the other guitarist in my band tune our guitars with the same tuner. : )

  • @dandyhook07
    @dandyhook07 6 місяців тому

    I’m shopping for a tuner, and this video is perfect. Thanks for posting!

  • @TxBassMan31
    @TxBassMan31 4 роки тому +1

    I once tried a clip on tuner on bass at a show. Needless to say I had to walk out of the club into the alley to tune before the show. The music over the PA made it impossible. Last time I did that. I then took that headstock tuner and mounted it to an unused spot on my bass controls and direct mounted it there with the wires directly wired to the output. Worked awesome.

  • @OzziePete1
    @OzziePete1 4 роки тому +42

    "Daddy, please make it stop!" "Shh son I'm watching this Anderton's video"

  • @mooferoo
    @mooferoo 4 роки тому +12

    The Polytune has a strobe mode as well that's more accurate than the normal mode.

    • @Benke01
      @Benke01 4 роки тому +2

      Yes indeed. I think if you want to be in tune use a tuner with a strobe! Captains, can't you do a strobe test to see which strobe tuner is the best? Or if they differ much. :)

    • @MattCorkum
      @MattCorkum 3 місяці тому

      And yet even in the regular mode, it was better than both the Boss ones! Haha.

  • @greg4272
    @greg4272 2 роки тому

    Lee, I am still watching, and it is interesting, cause I found problems with my current tuner as well, and I am looking for to choose a better one.
    So thank you for the video!

  • @michael_caz_nyc
    @michael_caz_nyc 4 роки тому +2

    I Love my TC Polytune 3 and my little Snark SN-8 for my Acoustic in the Park or Coffee-house Open-mic. Both are Fantastic, and I wouldn't be without either one. The Polytune 3 and the Peterson Sounded the Most Accurate ( to my ears ).

  • @PaulMorini
    @PaulMorini 4 роки тому +25

    James Taylor does a series on tunings. He moves string tuning up or down a few cent.

    • @TheSammyreynolds
      @TheSammyreynolds 4 роки тому

      that only works for capos

    • @marcobeltran7218
      @marcobeltran7218 4 роки тому +3

      Paul Morini His tuning “preset” is included in the Peterson tuner as a sweetened tuning simply known as “ACU” as in acoustic. I love my Peterson stroboclip.

  • @mattroberts4201
    @mattroberts4201 4 роки тому +4

    When you play that kind of open G, you’re only really hearing G and D notes (1st and 5th). When you play E you’re trying to get a pleasant sounding G# major 3rd on the first fret of your heaviest plain steel string which will always give you intonation problems (as it’s relatively stiff and doesn’t move much at each end of the string).

  • @jimjeffrey3914
    @jimjeffrey3914 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks for the super nerdy video! If you ever go down this road again I'd suggest also using the harmonic on the 12th fret. It seems to make the string ring more true.

  • @superbford
    @superbford 4 роки тому +2

    The Polytune and Korg Pitchblack series have always worked better for me than any Boss tuner. The Peterson work great, but I just don't like the strobe style as much. I have the Polytune clip on unitune and it is very solid. Love it.

  • @sonicalstudios
    @sonicalstudios 4 роки тому +3

    Some tuners are just more sensitive. A sensitive tuner can start to pick up the wave too much and never settle but it can also be very useful to fine nuances in your guitar.

  • @paulwatts003
    @paulwatts003 4 роки тому +6

    Yeah, I still use my old Boss TU-12. It does a great job in my opinion.

    • @paulwatts003
      @paulwatts003 4 роки тому +3

      @al I got mine about that time too. Glad I'm not the only one!

    • @slowpoke7888
      @slowpoke7888 4 роки тому

      @@paulwatts003 me too.

  • @42097595
    @42097595 4 роки тому

    I just bought a Boss Chromatic TU-3 and waiting for it to be delivered this week. Will give my review soon.

  • @andreasvangreunen
    @andreasvangreunen 4 роки тому +1

    Really interesting and informative video, thanks guys!

  • @RyanStreeterMusic
    @RyanStreeterMusic 4 роки тому +5

    Since a lot of us have switched to Kemper, Helix, etc. You guys should do an episode comparing the Kemper tuner vs Helix Tuner vs. Axe Fx, etc. Would be interested to see the results.

  • @anthonydevito1298
    @anthonydevito1298 4 роки тому +20

    I think you've accidentally stumbled upon the horrific imperfect art that is intonation!

  • @Idontlikethisever
    @Idontlikethisever 2 роки тому

    You guys are the best always make my day little better watching you guys. Thank you

  • @ant_yep
    @ant_yep 4 роки тому

    I really enjoyed this. I been looking for the "perfect" turner for intonation work.

  • @markhunstein9138
    @markhunstein9138 4 роки тому +48

    I would love to see how the Gibson robo tuners that everyone hated would compare to these

    • @TheIgisas
      @TheIgisas 4 роки тому

      Same

    • @davedavem
      @davedavem 4 роки тому +13

      More authentic tuning.

    • @TheIgisas
      @TheIgisas 4 роки тому

      @@davedavem how authentic?

    • @stanislavmigra
      @stanislavmigra 4 роки тому +4

      @@TheIgisas play authentic :D :D :D

    • @TheIgisas
      @TheIgisas 4 роки тому

      @@stanislavmigra shush

  • @duffypratt
    @duffypratt 4 роки тому +16

    There are a couple of reasons that the G chord sounds more in tune to you than the E. First, the third of the chord will always be more open to interpretation, because the 3rd is more out of tune in equal temperament. Second, when you fret unwound strings, especially the G and B strings, they tend to go sharp in comparison with the open string. Thus, when you fret the E chord’s third on the G string. It’s the most likely to sound a little wonky.
    Finally, the timers are more accurate than your ears, but your ears will tend to prefer intervals that are in just temperament, while the tuner will simply tune to the equal tempered frequency. So it’s very possible for a person to tune the guitar to a particular chord, but then have other chords sound out of tune.
    When you pluck a string hard, you are increasing the length of the string. Thus, the attack will always be a little sharp.

    • @WillyPDX94
      @WillyPDX94 4 роки тому

      Thanks for this explanation. I've read a bit about tempered tuning and I understand the gist of it, but your comment about why the G string is so tricky on an E chord---because it's the 3rd of the chord. That's a useful little nugget of knowledge there!

    • @williamsmith-ob6kv
      @williamsmith-ob6kv 4 роки тому

      Please be on my pub quiz team

    • @Reginaldesq
      @Reginaldesq 4 роки тому +1

      I'm far from an expert on the matter but I think you might be incorrect on you last point. My understanding is that a longer string will produce a flatter note (unless you tighten it up of course). I'm pretty sure the hard pluck makes the note go sharp due to the increased string tension from the stretching of the string. My basic rule with these thing is Shorter, thinner, tighter = sharper. I hope I'm right :)

    • @duffypratt
      @duffypratt 4 роки тому +2

      Reginaldesq Yes, you are right, you aren’t actually lengthening the string but increasing tension. Same effect as in bending.

    • @plunky58
      @plunky58 4 роки тому +2

      @@duffypratt I've never thought about that before, but isn't your original comment also true. If you measured the length of an open string, and then the same string bent up, say, 2 whole tones (big bend), surely it's now longer (although it would be at a higher tension too). So presumably an open plucked string, while vibrating, is also slightly longer, and simultaneously, under more tension. Two things at once, just as tuning is simultaneously boring and fascinating.

  • @dongonzulman6478
    @dongonzulman6478 4 роки тому

    I've had the Snark for a few months and once left it at our practice space for a week and was forced to use a boss tuner...I was so glad to get the snark back!

  • @BluesBroken
    @BluesBroken 4 роки тому

    Great playing Pete 😎

  • @cordanscedo
    @cordanscedo 4 роки тому +3

    May have been stated already but you could have grabbed a Boss ES-8 off the shelf and ran all of these tuners in loops and compared simultaneously. One output could have routed to an amp so we could hear Pete’s chords.

  • @ThorneyedWT
    @ThorneyedWT 4 роки тому +8

    I got korg pitchblack poly and it is wonderful. Giant screen, instant response, good precision and first of all polytuning which settled deal for me. TC polytune does the same, but with smaller screen and bigger price.

    • @BagusWibisono
      @BagusWibisono 3 роки тому

      How about in outdoors situation? (korg)

    • @rgr4929
      @rgr4929 3 роки тому

      @@BagusWibisono yeah, the Polytune 3 (only the big) has this automatic brightness adjustement that made me buy it.

    • @joelonsdale
      @joelonsdale 2 роки тому

      @@BagusWibisono Avoid Pitchblack for outdoor visibility! Hopeless....

  •  3 роки тому

    Thank you ! This is exactly the kind of review I was searching for !

  • @michaelbogdanowicz4313
    @michaelbogdanowicz4313 4 роки тому

    I've been waiting my whole life for this!

  • @AlcaHolicGamer
    @AlcaHolicGamer 4 роки тому +35

    The flaws of equal temperament tuning on display right here

  • @MarkSDD
    @MarkSDD 4 роки тому +4

    I stuck an Earvana nut on one of my guitars and hearing the open E and A chords being in tune is incredible. You get so used to the slight dissonance that hearing the chord without it is very surprising.

  • @fawkesandhound
    @fawkesandhound 3 роки тому

    This was my first Anderton’s video. I was wandering the Guitar Center trying to figure out which tuner to get. After a quick search for ‘best tuner?’ I got this and sat down with a floor model strat and watched the whole damn thing. Had NO idea Anderton’s would become my favorite gear content channel. Oh! I went with the clip on poly tune, thanks!

  • @Blisterish2010
    @Blisterish2010 4 роки тому +1

    When recording tracks with guitars and bass, everyone knows to tune up with the SAME tuner before you roll tape. Excellent video...very educational.

  • @gwgwgwgw1854
    @gwgwgwgw1854 3 роки тому +3

    Also, if you pluck a string hard it will register sharp compared to when the string settles down a bit a second or two later. This is because when it's vibrating harder it is essentially tighter and thus sharper. My advice is to play the strings firmly but not super hard when tuning.

  • @Hillbilly_Papist
    @Hillbilly_Papist 4 роки тому +4

    Korg Pitchblack is one of the best pedal tuners I've used. I just recommend if playing in a band everyone use the same brand and make. Edit: The mentioned that right after i posted this.

  • @sybamunki
    @sybamunki 4 роки тому

    I’ve been thinking the same thing Lee! You’re not alone!

  • @rossco289
    @rossco289 Рік тому

    G'day Men, I still use and old Korg GT6 for my initial tune up and then a clip on for on the run quick checking. Years ago it was tune from a Piano and use your ears. The great players seem to tune whilst they're playing, eg Mr Emanuel. Thanks for the video.

  • @dotnetnuclearllc
    @dotnetnuclearllc 4 роки тому +4

    I've always used Korg tuners. I have the standard Pitchblack pedal and before that the Korg rackmount. They always have seemed the most reliably accurate tuners. Never understood why so many players use the Boss tuner pedal. Much harder to see and less accurate than Korg or TC tuners.

  • @GerryBlue
    @GerryBlue 4 роки тому +31

    Neighbors complain about my playing, wait 'til I blast this video on my speakers

  • @doyrayburn2668
    @doyrayburn2668 4 роки тому +1

    GREAT, and necessary, vid! Thanks. It lets people know they arent crazy or tone def. Brilliant.

  • @matthewhoward4549
    @matthewhoward4549 4 роки тому +1

    With tuning stability, I always pull the strings up from the fretboard around an inch and you will find the string will go flat ig it was sharp and you tune down. I always tune from flat to sharp.
    This is due to winding the string up through the nut giving you zero string lag.
    I use the pitch black and PRS guitars with graphite nuts.
    Try it. Tune a sharp string down to pitch on your tuner then pull it up from the fretboard around an inch and it will now be flat no matter how expensive your nit material is.

  • @guitar_fed
    @guitar_fed 4 роки тому +15

    I lost it at "strap-on tuner" ... filthy Captain 🤣

  • @aj5542
    @aj5542 4 роки тому +4

    I have a Boss TU3 and thought I needed a guitar set up ... used my buddy's TC and tuned up and checked everything and the guitar was perfect. I spent months tuning and then strumming a chord and fixing my tuning. I work at a studio and we use a Boss tuner and I feel like its never correct. The TC is always super accurate and the Boss seems off. I don't trust it. I 100% believe in this test.

  • @wombat6
    @wombat6 4 роки тому

    Usually, I watch the videos more for the goofiness than for the content, because I'm well enough informed about the stuff I think I need to know, but this was definitely a useful one. Nice idea !

  • @rowlandstraylight
    @rowlandstraylight 4 роки тому

    The buffer on a tuner is really important, you can do true bypass and some like the TC electronic ones let you choose between true and buffered bypass. But having a buffer at the start of your pedal chain (or after the true bypass fuzz) helps isolate your guitar from capacitive losses from long cable runs.
    You can shift the reference A frequency on most tuners, so tuning a guitar on your best tuner and then setting the other tuners to replicate it is the best way to keep a band happy.

  • @CNCTEMATIC
    @CNCTEMATIC 4 роки тому +11

    The Polytune has a strobe mode too. When trying to tune for exact (open strings) its better to use the first harmonic. You'll get less tone movement because the energy you put into the string gets split in half; more stable

    • @MikeTaffet
      @MikeTaffet 9 місяців тому +1

      Also using the middle pickup position is ideal

    • @sunnyschramm9650
      @sunnyschramm9650 5 місяців тому +1

      they showed it

  • @johnathan.jerusik
    @johnathan.jerusik 4 роки тому +6

    I wish you guys did the strobe mode on the polytune 3. It claims to be +/- .02 cents accurate which is basically very close if not the same as the Peterson tuner.

  • @TheTMontgomery
    @TheTMontgomery 4 роки тому

    Wonderful video
    Although it may seem tedious; It is an essential part of good playing.
    From this I would suggest using 3 tuners a strobe ,plug in and a vibration clip on.
    Thanks

  • @dmmjq2
    @dmmjq2 4 роки тому

    Great video guys it still depends on the guitar..the fret height and how hard you push your strings. And the strings you use... I use 9 gauge ghs Boomers.. using the TC Electronics tuner.. my Frets are medium jumbo.. so I can't press too hard up the neck or Goes Out Of Tune slightly.. I'll say most if not all guitars have this issue.. but it's not really an issue depending on the player.. I'm all right with it because I know how to deal with it On My Guitar..

  • @Happy-Me.
    @Happy-Me. 4 роки тому +35

    Pitch Fork? I thought that it was a Tuning Fork! Don't you use Pitch forks with your hay? 🤔

    • @tree267
      @tree267 4 роки тому +1

      Well there is a huge music related site called pitchfork.

    • @Happy-Me.
      @Happy-Me. 4 роки тому +2

      @@tree267 Well to be honest Pitchfork is a better play on words than Tuning Fork! 😉

    • @katyungodly
      @katyungodly 3 роки тому

      It’s punnier that way 😂

    • @captaindelculo1731
      @captaindelculo1731 3 роки тому +3

      I mean technically you could use a tuning fork to shift hay, it would just take a little longer lol