(Part 2) Best guitar tuners according to redditors

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We found 171 Reddit comments discussing the best guitar tuners. We ranked the 43 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top Reddit comments about Guitar Tuners:

u/[deleted] · 100 pointsr/guitarlessons

Looks like a (broken off?) part of a Chord Buddy.
https://www.amazon.com/Chord-Guitar-Learning-System-Chromatic/dp/B00E3G4BWA

u/Fargeen_Bastich · 9 pointsr/Guitar
u/WatermelonMannequin · 4 pointsr/modular

I just got a Korg CA2 Chromatic Tuner and so far it works great. It can handle oscillator signals at full volume

u/armyofachiliad · 3 pointsr/shoegaze

Oh man, that's a question. The guitar is one of those crappy Ibanez GIOs with a fucked up tremolo so I can bend up and down. It's a bitch to keep in tune, ha.

TC Hall of Fame, Z. Vex Fuzz Factory, and a Realistic Electronic Reverb were the only pedals I used for guitar. A lot of the sound was driven by my amp, a Vox AD50VT and the slew of amp models and onboard effects.

The drum machine was an Alesis SR-16 ran through a Hot Rod

Vocals many times were also recorded through the Hall of Fame

There was also a lot of production work in Sonar: organizing loops, reverb, eq, etc. I like the Waves plugins a lot.

I put the Realistic in front of the Hall of Fame in the chain because it acts as a sort of slapback and fuzz, and the modulation from the Hall of Fame reacts really well to it

Mics are crappy MXLs. Guitars, drum machine, and bass were all direct input into a Tascam US-1641

Nothing really nice in the traditional sense, I guess, but I sure love this junk :)

u/nudimmud · 2 pointsr/iran

‌How to tune a setar using a basic, cheap tuner. I have that same tuner but use it for santur.

Edit: That tuner on Amazon.

u/cob50nm · 2 pointsr/Guitar

Those other 2 that you linked are single strings. I would say get a few other things like a Metronome/tuner and a stand rather than paying €5 per string.

u/swiftLikeSnail · 2 pointsr/ukulele

Aloha,
Couple of things. For the purposes of the teaching the Kala MK-CE will do fine. If you find an acoustic version that appeals to you, you can add a pickup like this one.

As for tuners, the ones using a visual help relate flat and sharp rather than the ones just showing you are on the note.
I would get one tuner for every four ukuleles since you shouldn't need them all the time. You will find them to be tuning all the time for the first week and then not so much.

u/yoduh4077 · 2 pointsr/Guitar

I use a Korg Pitchblack Chromatic Pedal Tuner in Metallic Red. I had no idea they run for so much now, I got mine on sale at GC for like $40, haha.

edit: Korg also makes a mini, but I don't know if it comes in red.

u/TeenageHandM0del · 2 pointsr/Bass

The Boss TU10 is a great clip-on. A little more that $15 but responsive and reliable and backlit for poorly lit rooms. I have 2 that I keep on my acoustics so I can quickly tune up every time I pick up a guitar.

u/geetarzrkool · 2 pointsr/Guitar

I would skip the Esteban DVD, but strings, picks, or tuners are all good cheap items. In fact, there's a decent little clip-on brand of tuners called SNARK that are very popular and are only about $15-20.


This one even comes with a few picks included, but you can get the tuner along for about $10-15:

http://www.amazon.com/Snark-Instrument-Tuner-Tempo-Metronome/dp/B006X735PQ/ref=sr_1_8?s=musical-instruments&ie=UTF8&qid=1450285093&sr=1-8&keywords=Snark+guitar+tuner

u/TheChurchofHelix · 1 pointr/Bass

For instance

I use this one, though since I like the really tiny display.

u/Klubhead · 1 pointr/Guitar

Thanks for the reply! Looking into the Intellitouch and this right now.

u/Bunnygirl78 · 1 pointr/ukulele
u/RanzoRanzo · 1 pointr/ukulele

I misplace my clip-on tuners all the time. I also play other instruments that don't take to clip on tuners very well, so I see the value in having a good app.

I really like DaTuner. It's responsive, packed with features, and doesn't try to be cute.

For clip-ons, I really like the Rechargeable Kala Klipz. The charge lasts a ridiculously long time.

u/spectrophotometer · 0 pointsr/violinist

I agree that Suzuki books are great for beginners. They offer a gradual approach that isn't too difficult, since you're learning on your own.

If getting a teacher is not possible, I would recommend using the videos/links I posted in another thread. Some of the techniques may mean nothing to you at the moment, though - just wait for it to appear in your playing.

Rode's caprices, as /u/breannabalaam said, are a precursor to Paganini's. The recommended progression for caprices is Mazas/Kreutzer, then Rode, and finally Paganini. While not all of the Mazas caprices will be easily playable for you, at any level, you will always be able to play a few (once you're out, it's time for Kreutzer, etc.)

Regarding metronomes - if you don't mind, there are online metronomes and iPhone apps. If you want a separate gadget as your metronome, I would recommend the Korg metronome. It allows a variety of tempos and beat types (triplets, eighth notes, sixteenth notes, dotted rhythms, etc.) Hope this helped!

u/tootie · -2 pointsr/cordcutters