![]() ![]() Because of this you will start by using rubber or felt wedge mutes to mute all but 1 string, which you tune with Easy Piano Tuner. However you can only tune one string at a time because you (and your tuning software) can’t listen to 2 strings at once. You will notice that most notes on the piano have 3 strings per note. Then we go back to the tenor break and tune left to the bottom of the piano. Tuning orderįor this tutorial we will start at the bottom of the tenor break (where the strings cross over each other) and tune up through the midsection to the top of the piano. The pitch adjustment gives you an added benefit of letting EPT sample all the notes for a more precisely calculated tuning in the fine tuning pass. ![]() If your piano is very out of tune (more than 10 or 15 cents flat) you should consider tuning it in two passes: a quick “rough” pass to get the piano in the ballpark, followed by a slower fine-tuning. (You can actually sample all the notes in under 2 minutes, playing each note for one second each.) Pitch adjustment I typically play 2 notes per octave, but you can do as many as you like. Then play several notes across the range of the piano so EPT can listen to the piano and calculate a tuning curve. Open Easy Piano Tuner and use the menu in the upper left to create a New Tuning File, which will clear out any information from previous usage. From top to bottom: felt wedge mutes, rubber wedge mutes, treble mute, papps mute Establish a tuning curve ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |