Does this answer the question posed by David about whether or not this shows the cents off? I guess I'll go to the link and see if that clears this up. I emailed Turbo tuners(twice), and this is what they told me. What they are saying is: THis device works the same as the good old Conn genuine strobe tuners, where you keep sounding the note, and twist the pitch-offset knob until the pattern holds steady. Then read the cents sharp or flat off the knob scale. I do this all the time when tuning my crank "monkey" organs. The only difference in this digital device is that you push and hold buttons, rather than twist a knob.īut no, you can't just sound the note and expect the cents offset to show up on its own.Īs someone mentioned last year, this can be a big inconvenience if you need both hands to sound the note and can't spare one to tweak the offset knob. It also requires the offset knob to be nicely calibrated in cents so you can read it afterwards (which the digital unit under discussion apparently does down to 0.1 cent, excellent). I have a nice Korg digital tuner that reads cents offset directly, but its readings tend to jitter around, eeven during a steady tone from an organ or tina. So for serious work I use my good old Conn, which uses vacuum tubes to drive the strobe motor. I keep looking an new meter options, not that there is anything wrong with mine, but it will need replacing/ upgrading one day. and who can file a reed to that level of precision on a trial and error basis? Tuning a concertina is not like tuning a violin where you can turn an infinitely variable knob until the error goes away! I think that people get obsessed by finite degrees of accuracy, +/- 0.01 of a cent OH -WOW, big deal! but the ear cannot distinguish +/- 1 cent. Range: a Bass goes down to 43.6 Hz (F1) a piccolo 4186.0 Hz C8, and especially the sensitivity of the microphone/ pick up at these extremes. Hands free operation: as stated by others, concertinas are two handed to sound, as are some tuning rig set ups I also like the analogue display because it is both numeric and positional, as you 'nudge' a reading closer to a target value Stability and visual clarity of the display: the ability to give a steady readout at any point along the range, I like an analogue 'reed' -out ( ) because the needle damping helps with this. Precision/ repeatability, even under battery power. some meters drift as batteries decay, I always work off a transformer, unless away from my baseĪccuracy through out the range, appropriate accuracy and consistency. Would a nail manufacturer producing 4 ins nails ship to +/- 0.0005 of an inch? or even have the capability (in-line) to discriminate at this precision? In engineering we establish tolerances and choose then calibrate instrumentation to be consistent to the precision and accuracy levels appropriate and required. Hope that this will help any would-be 'meter maids!' sorry Beatlesįully agree with your post. It cannot be ruled out that your data collected by Facebook will also be transmitted to the USA.My preference is for an analogue needle meter (as large as possible) and I back this up with a digital display 'needle' meter which also displays cents. We ourselves are not in a position to identify you personally via the meta pixel, as apart from your browser ID no other data is stored with us via the pixel.įor more information about the Meta Pixel, the details of data processing via this service and Meta's privacy policy, please visit Meta Privacy Policy - How Meta collects and uses user data for Facebook and Meta Privacy Policy - How Meta collects and uses user data for Instagram. Meta then delivers individualised ads from us on Facebook or on Instagram that are tailored to your needs. Meta is able to identify you by your browser ID, as this is linked to other data about you stored by Meta on your Facebook or Instagram user account. When you visit our websites, the pixel establishes a direct connection to Meta's servers. The meta pixel are code snippets which are able to identify your browser type via the browser ID - the individual fingerprint of your browser - and to recognise that you have visited our websites and what exactly you have looked at on our websites. The Meta Pixel is a remarketing pixel implemented on our websites that allows us to target you directly via the Meta Network by serving ads to visitors of our websites when they visit the social networks Facebook and Instagram.
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