AO: We are back from the dead... again! After an 18 day outage, we are finally alive and well. Who knew how complicated updating software/databases from 2008 would be. I still have alot of tweaks to make, but my main goal was getting everything patched and updated to 2026.
Vbulletin 6 has changed alot since 2008 so we will have a ton of new features to dig into.
i just picked up a used classical guitar for $15 from a garage sale and i need help tuning it. can anyone help out an inspiring/wannabe guitar player please? i know there are some talented musicians here.
thanks
Zen
A good friend will come and bail you out of jail...but, a true friend will be sitting next to you saying, "Damn...that was fun!"
I cant play the guitar worth anything but I can tell you how to tune it
you need to have your BASE string (fattest) tuned already though, because thats how you are going to tune the others... it wont be most likely, but its ok once you learn this you can do it later when the string is tuned properly (with a tuning fork or a tuning devise, can be bought for 20$)
*getting guitar out*
sorry if you know all this, but I dont know if you do
the little silver lines on the guitar neck are frets
- Count to the 5th fret on the fat string (low E)
- put your finger a little behind it, hold it firmly, and play that string
- while holding that there, play the string one step up (the next biggest one) make sure you arent touching the string with your 5th fret finger
- now, tune the second biggest string with the little nob GENTLY until the two strings sound the same
- when they are in tune with each other, move on to the next string (the just tuned one) and do the same thing
- keep doing this until you reach the EDIT** 4th string, which then you will hold the 4th fret instead of the 5th fret to tune the last string (smallest one - high E)
Hope this helps, ask questions if you need so im right here
There are free programs you can download to tune your guitar. I don't know the links off hand but just do a search at like www.download.com . If you have a mic it will even show you what your guitar is at. The strings Going from the top (closest to you) are (top of neck)E(low) A D G B (bottom of neck)E(high) tune the low E first. Then if you read the post above you can tune the rest yourself or use the program to tune it.
Good Traders/Dealers: Ken Kaniff, HawPunch, RougeFactor.
i may be wrong but i used to tune my bass to the dialtone.
my brother once mentioned he thought the dial tone was A440
so i would pick up the phone, tune my A string to that and go from there.
of course i bought a tuner and have used that for the past 13 years.
once you get the hang of playing a bit you can tune to records or the radio, although not all recordings are proper pitch. so sometimes its a neccesity if you want to play along with a favorite tune.
i tried tuning it by ear but i ended up snapping the third string from the top(i believe its the D string), OMG that was scary lol, i almost got whipped in the face. so i said the hell with it and i went out and bought a $20 dollar electronic guitar tuner and a set of Ernie Ball strings.
again thanks for all your help,
Zen
A good friend will come and bail you out of jail...but, a true friend will be sitting next to you saying, "Damn...that was fun!"
If your serious about guitar, I think you HAVE to learn to tune it without an electronic tuner. Just everytime you pick it up, try and tune it. If you can't get it, use the electronic one, and see where you went wrong. It takes a lot of PRACTICE, and even if your between being tone deaf, and a music whiz, it'll still take forever - like me! Don't rely soley on it, cause it will be a crutch in the future.
if you have access to a piano, turn your E string (that's the fat one) to the 2nd E below middle C - then work your way up
E A D G B E
then do it again, and again until you find you don't have to adjust the strings any more.
When you make major changes in the tuning the neck will bend some, throwing off the tuning of the first string you tuned.
If the guitar is way out, you may have to do this 2 or 3 times. If its close, one time through will do.
Once you have it "in tune" you should tune it to itself using the methods described by others (tune the smaller strings to the E string) because the intonation may be such that the sound is inconsistent if tuned directly to a piano - and the piano may be off.
If you broke a string you either had REALLY old strings, or you tuned it WAY to high.
An electronic tuner is nice - but many of them can only tell you the note, and not the octave. Once you get it close, minor adjustments back into tune can be done with the electronic deal or tuning to the E string (which is the least likely to "go out").
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