Okay, sorry for this just had to bite as most guitarists are taught dodgy tuning
methods... This one is for equal temperament, which you have to use because you have frets
in a fixed position. Bear in mind that the intonation on your guitar has to be in for this
to work (check the harmonic at the 12th fret with the fretted note there, they should be
exactly the same) :
1 get your A string in tune from a piano, pitchfork, whatever... A is a good oneto start
with because the peg is a little bit protected and it is the standard tuning note.
2 tune the low E by comparing the 5th fret on the E with the open A
3 tune the D by comparing the 12th fret harmonic on the A with the 7th fret on the D
string
4 tune the G by comparing the 12th fret harmonic on the A with the the 2nd fret on the G
string
5 tune the B by comparing the 5th fret harmonic on the A with the 10th fret on the B
string
6 tune the top E by comparing the 5th fret harmonic on the A with the 5th fret on the top
E string
The rationale for all this is first that you are tuning everything off of the same string
so you don't get compound error from tuning every string from the pitch of the last
one tuned (A from 5th on E, D from 5th on A, etc) and secondly the harmonics which produce
octaves should be perfectly in tune whereas the 5ths are out in terms of equal
temperament.
The only problem is getting to the pegs with your right hand while fretting with your left
quick enough before the harmonics die out...
Good luck getting that thing in tune,
James Fenn
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James Fenn
www.jamesfenn.co.uk