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View Poll Results: Your favorite clip-on tuner, and why? | |||
Snark | 62 | 34.64% | |
Peterson Stroboclip | 32 | 17.88% | |
TC Electronics Unitune | 21 | 11.73% | |
TC Electronics Polytune | 34 | 18.99% | |
Other | 30 | 16.76% | |
Voters: 179. You may not vote on this poll |
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#106
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I guess I'm the odd man out.
Using the Kliq Ubertuner. https://www.kliqmusicgear.com/produc...-clip-on-tuner Promoted as more rugged than the Snark (which I've never owned), and I will say its support post is massive compared to the Snarks I've examined. Second clip-on I've own. First was a Intelli, likely the TT500. I lost it somehow after years. |
#107
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I'll add one more reason I chose the Stroboclip HD:
I play harmonica in a rack with my guitar, and harmonicas tend to be sharp from A440. More like A442 ish, some a bit higher. I can't stand it, to be honest. When I'm playing blues harp cupped with a mic, I can sort of overcome it - but when it's in the rack, not so much. I programmed my Peterson with a preset I call HAR (harp) - a tuning adding +8 cents to each string, and my guitar sounds much more in tune with my harmonicas now. I'm still playing with how much offset to add, but that's where I am right now. The Peterson connect website is cool for this kind of stuff, when your Stroboclip HD is connected.
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Taylor GS Mini Mahogany La Michoacana Classical (my Dad's guitar) Beat to heck Seagull S6 Ovation Celebrity 12 string Fender CD 60 dread that lives in Greece Harmonicas in a Farmer rack |
#108
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Bringing this old-ish (but not quite zombie) thread back for a quick note. I'd sung the praises of the D'Addario micro tuner earlier in this thread, along with a few other people. Well, I noticed what looked like an update to this tuner recently when I was browsing some other stuff. So I bought a couple of them (hey, two for $22 on Amazon, why not), and I gotta say, they're notably improved, although without losing any of what I liked about them before.
The way I use these tuners is in the soundhole of my Emerald X7, which requites that I remove the mounting clip (which they make easily removable) and cut the little nub off that holds it to the mounting clip. Then I stick a piece of dual-lock on the back of it, and another inside the soundhole, and mount the tuner upside-down inside the sound hole. Like this: 0 by Ray, on Flickr So I have to feel for the various buttons, but the only one I try to press with any regularity is the on-off button. Well, the new design (as you can see below - new one on the left) has a single button "pad" rather than individual buttons and the only button that's raised and easy to press without looking at them is the on-off. So that's a big tactile improvement for me - on the old one I was too often flipping the orientation or accidentally adjusting the default pitch. The other thing that's a big improvement (also seen below) is the new one is more visible than the older one, with a brighter display and bolder colors to show when you're in or out of tune. This was never a problem with the old one, but it's an improvement anyway... I assume it will still have a great battery life. They haven't changed the auto-off time, which I also like about this tuner - it takes a while to go off. And, like most tuners, it can still be a little balky with the low-E, sometimes it finds it right away, sometimes I have to hit the harmonic and THEN it'll hear the normally plucked note. Oh, they did apparently get rid of the visual metronome, which is no loss for me, but some folks may have used it. For me, it was just another wrong button to push accidentally... Anyway, an already great tuner is better in some small ways, but ways that make a pretty big difference to me. So even more highly recommended... unnamed-3 by Ray, on Flickr Here's a photo of the display on the old one for comparison to the first photo, above... unnamed by Ray, on Flickr Last edited by raysachs; 08-31-2019 at 11:23 AM. |
#109
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Your favorite clip-on tuner, and why?
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Just got two of the D’Addario clip-on. They are great. May never take them off. Ordering two more for me and two for my grandsons! Now what do I do with my old Korg not clip on tuners? |
#110
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Quote:
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Journey OF660, Adamas 1581, 1587, 1881, SMT - PRS Cu22, Ibanez JEM-FP, S540, RG550, Fender Stratocaster Heil PR-35 : Audio Technica AE-6100, ATM5R : Beyer TG-V90r : Sennheiser 441, 609, 845, 906 : ElectroVoice ND767 HK 608i Friedman WW Smallbox, Marshall 4212 |
#111
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The screw-on option looks great because it's always there, and it looks like it doesn't damage the guitar, but if you need a quick battery change, are you screwed?
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Eastman E1SS-CLA-LTD Eastman E1OOSS-LTD Cordoba Fusion Orchestra CE Cordoba SM-CE Mini Classical Acoustic Ibanez Blazer 21 MIJ Stratocaster 2 Yamaha PSR-SX900 keyboards I play professionally Roland FP-90 digital piano I play for pleasure with piano VSTs. |
#112
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So, no, you won't have any problem changing batteries - you just unclip the tuner from whatever mount you're using, change the battery, and slip it back in place. And the battery life on these tuners is freakin' AMAZING, so you probably won't have to change them more than once or twice a year. And that's with a pretty long auto-off time, too. -Ray |
#113
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I second that. I've been using one for a couple of years and I may have replaced the battery once.
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Patrick 2012 Martin HD-28V 1984 Martin Shenandoah D-2832 2018 Gretsch G5420TG Oscar Schmidt Autoharp, unknown vintage ToneDexter Bugera V22 Infinium |