The PST also includes a Programmable Temperament Function with 5 user definable banks. The second screenshot shows the display for an E 440 Tuning Fork with the Calibration Dial enabled and adjusted. This string rings bright, so the overtones are also dominant in the Display. The Fundamental appears as an Orange peak in the Spectrum Display. The first screenshot shows the display tuning a Guitar Low E string. The previews show a general strobe display demonstration, an example of using the calibration function to measure the accuracy of a tuning fork and an example of guitar string tuning. When the rotation is stopped, the note is in tune. The Two-Group pattern rotates CCW when the input is flat, and CW when sharp. The outside Strobe Display works just like a classic rotating disk strobe tuner. The Strobe Display responds instantaneously to changes in pitch and is extremely sensitive. Fine tuning is accomplished by adjusting to stop rotation. Use the Spectrum Display for coarse adjustment by tuning the Fundamental to the center of the desired Note Indicator.Īs the input approaches the desired Note, a Two Group pinwheel pattern becomes visible rotating in the Strobe Display. The Fundamental Indicator Tic on the Spectrum Display shows the Note of the Fundamental along the Note Dial, with the color designating the Octave. All overtones of the input are shown as peaks in the Spectrum Display pointing towards their corresponding Notes. The Note Dial is marked like a clock with the twelve notes of the Scale. The central Spectrum Display shows the input spectrum wrapped around the Display, with each Octave drawn in a separate color. The Strobe Display is highly sensitive with response speed that is practically instantaneous and has long been the preferred tool for piano tuners and instrument technicians. The PST combines a radial Spectrum Display with a classic Strobe Tuner and Note Dial for an ultimate visualization of pitch and tone. Clicking article links on these Index pages will open the legacy site article on Wayback Machine.A General Purpose Chromatic Musical Instrument Tuner App with special Temperament and Piano Tuning Functions. We have catalogued the SOS missing articles from January 1994 to December 2001 and built two indexes: one by issue and one listing all articles. This means it has captured snapshots of the full SOS legacy site, as it used to be - meaning SOS articles not yet on our own site can still be found in Wayback's extensive web archived pages. Thanks go to a wonderful non-profit organisation called, who run their Wayback Machine service that catalogues billions of web pages daily from all web sites. Sorry to make you wait! Temporary Solution? Generally, they will be added one past issue at a time (in reverse order back to January 1994), so please bear with us. We are working hard to get the remaining issues brought over as soon as possible but this conversion and reformatting will take time, due to commitments to producing the new issue each month. You have reached this page because you have tried to access a link to a Sound On Sound article which has not yet been migrated from our old site. Missing past issues? Can't find an SOS article? Contact us if you think this is a valid URL which ought to be working: Click here.Use our search engine to find what you are looking for: Click here.Check the spelling of the address (URL) in your browser.We are unable to find the page or file you are looking for.
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