That said, as I said, no problems and it's really handy. It pays to read the manual, because a lot of things are not obvious (like how to change the sensitivity/speed). Arturia Analog Lab 4 Classic Minitune PresetsIn the latest edition, Analog Lab has been given some fantastic upgrades and refinements to make it even mor. The latest edition (which they switched to in either 2015 or 2016) is quite good in my opinion. so I cannot speak to that one directly, never owned it. The Min-E-tune system is somewhere in between the latest G-force model and the 1st edition ones. On the slow setting I have it on, it takes more like 15, but it's dead on and zero effort. Basically, on the fast setting it's fairly accurate and tunes in like 3 seconds. Restringing is slower with the G-force, but changing tunings is a breeze. I got them quite cheap used off people taking them off (I like to imagine the former owners wore a lot of tan pants). I actually gutted the original to replace it with the latest version, because it was better. One of the guitars I had it on was an original Robot SG that had the first generation tuners on it for 8 years with no problems (other than the first generation were a bit slow). From Gravely to TORO, Mini Tune Lawn & Landscape Depot carries an extensive assortment of parts for any and all yard equipment needs. I have the latest generation G-Force on two guitars with not a problem in two years. If they had to sacrifice a dozen goofy open tunings to make room, or at least make them harder to access, i think the tradeoff would be well worth it for a quicker more viable "normal use" system. If a busted string onstage meant pulling the busted bits off the guitar like normal, threading a new string into the key post like normal, then pressing a "tighten" button right there on the back of that key that at least wound the string as fast as a pegwinder, that would be a stageworthy system. hell, regular non-locking posts would have been fine.įor the same reason, the buttons on the back should have been much more intuitive for onstage use, maybe with a "wind up" and "wind down" pair of buttons by each key, always available. I guess they couldn't do normal thumbwheel-on-the-back locks because of the mechanicals inside the keys, but they could have done normal "thumbwheel-on-the-top" locking keys like the current PRS keys or even the gotoh style where it self-locks when you wind up the key. they made the string-attaching method awkward (including an easily-lost part), then buried a slow, tedious restringing protocol several layers deep in menus that are not understandable from looking at the device itself. When the two notes match perfectly, the pulsation stops and the two notes sound, as one.Click to expand.old thread but yeah, good point. As you tune the string, the pitches get closer and the pulsation slows. If your string is slightly out of tune, you will hear a pulsating sound between the two notes. Click the string you want to tune, and play the corresponding string on your bass guitar so the two notes sound together. Or, click the "Tuner" button above to activate the manual tuner. Use the online tuner to tune your bass guitar using your device’s microphone. For example, here is a A major scale and the bass notes for the song Bitter Sweet Symphony. This also allows you to share your markings with others. Save your markings on the bass guitar by copying the web address in your browser. Press and hold the alt key on your keyboard to mark notes with ♯ instead of ♭. Click "Mark" to mark notes on the fretboard. The four rows of keys on your keyboard corresponds to the four strings on the bass guitar.Ĭlick "Highlight" above the bass guitar to show note names on the fretboard. Use your computer keyboard or click on the strings to play the bass guitar.
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