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« Korg DTR-1000 »

Published on 09/24/10 at 15:00
It's a grey tuner with one front and one rear input jack, large tuning meter and bright LED's to show the note name. It also features a mute switch for muting the onboard output if you decide to run it in your signal path, a flat switch for tuning down, and a calibration switch for setting A to something other than 440Hz. Last but not least, the display switch switches the tuning meter back and forth from strobe to cent display and back and forth. As a musician, I've played bass and piano professionally in bands, for musicals, and for orchestras for around 12 years now. I have yet to really figure out what my genre or style of choice is.

I got it used for $100 because the band I was in was going on a national tour and I wanted an accurate tuner that wasn't going to be another pedal on my already crowded pedal board. I also didn't want a tuner in my signal path. Sure, that's being picky with tone, but some tuners can be quite noisy as well while they're at it. So I knew I wanted a rackmount tuner that could simply run off of the Tuner Output on my amp head and stay out of my way. Also, the strobe display looks really awesome when you aren't playing, beacuse all the lights go crazy.

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I needed an accurate tuner, and this is accurate to within 1 cent in either direction, which is good enough to be almost beyond human ear detection. Only Peterson has more accurate tuners than that. Still, it's very good for what it does, and I like the ability to switch to a strobe display for further tuning accuracy. I also like the input setup. I can choose between plugging in in front, in back, or running it in my signal path from either input. There is also a mute switch and a jack for a footswitch to control the mute on board.

I haven't found any dislikes as of yet. If I had to be really picky, and I do enjoy being picky, I'd like to have a feature that heard and matched the pitch of an instrument you were playing with (so that you knew when to tune to A at 440 Hz and when to tune to A at say, 436 Hz). These situations largely only come up in orchestra, chamber ensembles, or in folk groups with instruments that aren't easily tuned or that don't tune to 440Hz or don't tune at all (such as a penny whistle). Still, in these situations you can usually use your ear to tune with them, but it would help to have a tuner that made the relative adjustment for you, found the new root frequency, and allowed you to tune from there. (UPDATE! The Korg DTR-2000 allows you to do just that with a microphone input)

I have no problems with it, and I foresee no problems with it, because I take care of my gear and don't throw it off buildings or down stairs.

Solid unit that does exactly what it means to do well. I call that a success. I also can understand why it's the standard among most touring guitar and bass players. 5 stars.

This review was originally published on http://www.musicgearreview.com