

GFI Ultra Keyless S-10 with pad (Black of course) TB202 amp, Hilton VP, SIT StringsĬakewalk by Bandlab and Studio One V4. Take advantage of Peterson Sweetened Tunings with StroboSoft Deluxe. Its easy Using your Peterson strobe tuner, your guitar will sound much better than when tuned using an ordinary tuner.
Peterson sweetened tuning pdf#
Here is the chart (If you want a PDF or MSWord copy, e-mail me and state which one you want). Because of Peterson tuners unique Sweetened Tuning feature, each tuner has a host of tempered presets which you simply choose - the tuner then guides you automatically just like using an ordinary tuner but sweeter. The same approach can be used for any other tuning programs. Newer Peterson Tuners (StroboPlus HD and StroboStomp HD) have the capability of displaying alternate offset notes for the same octave and the changes listed in my JKL can be incorporated into E9th and C6th tuning programs. The tuning numbers for the extras were developed with my Franklin - works for me on my GFI too.

Peterson sweetened tuning full#
Not a big deal as these rarely need adjustment. This includes the 1st string full tone G raise, 2nd string E raise, 5th string B and A lowers, 6th string G and F lowers, 7th string G raise, 9th string C lower and 10th string B and A lowers. Today Im taking a look at 'sweetened' tunings, which change the relationship between intervals by tuning offsets into the guitar. Applying the adage 'in for a penny, in for a pound' I coughed up the extra 6 for the. It did not match my Korg CA40 exactly, but the strobe feature is a handy tool that I never appreciated before. E9th 4th string F# raise and 4th string lower to D#. So I messed with the Peterson iPhone tuner and got it to (supposedly) work as it should. The third, "JKL" is what couldn't be in the combined. The C6th (JC6) is just the Newman sweetened open/pedals/knee combined into one. This includes the 1st string full tone G# raise, 2nd string E raise, 5th string B and A# lowers, 6th string G and F# lowers, 7th string G raise, 9th string C# lower and 10th string B and A# lowers. I also added several E9th changes that are common now but were not in the 80's when the Newman charts were developed. My chart is the Newman sweetened tunings with the opens/pedals/knees combined into one program. Some may have the updated chart, but for those that don't, here is the updated chart. I've sent this chart to many and according to the Peterson site my "JE9" for E9th has been "shared" (as Peterson calls it) 40 times. I found one change that was omitted from the chart but not the actual JE9 program.
