I'm a trombone/euphonium player and I had a lot of trouble with both a VSAM and a stroboflip locking onto the pitch AND with the fake strobe display jumping around. This is in both busy rooms and in my quiet practice room.tuben wrote: Really? Because I've found the VSAM to be VERY stable for pitch. When dealing with a expertly voiced pipe (by me...), that produces a stable tone, the VSAM locks like a clamp onto the pitch. Did you try the VSAM in a busy room? When you say it wouldn't lock onto a pitch, do you mean the note name indicator was jumping around, or that the strobe was constantly moving?
You telling me 99% of tuba players can't play a pedal tone? According to peterson, their algorithm actually filters out everything but the fundamental, so the rich harmonic content in the low range shouldn't matter past the point at which the fundamental is detected. In my experience, using it in the "bass shift" mode helps it figure out the fundamental, even if you aren't playing all the way down in the 1st octave.My VSAM will tune, and produce pitch to 32' CCCC (16hz) without pushing any special buttons. And oh by the way, why do you need to try and tune to 64' CCCCC (8hz) to a tuner when 99% of tuba players can't even play the 32' CCCC?
I believe that quote is aimed at electric guitar players who often need to tune w/o being able to hear their instruments, and for whom the lack of accuracy on needle and LED-based tuners means they need to tweak their tuning by ear after tuning their strings with such a tuner in order for chords to ring true.This one line from the turbotuner website is enough for me, "The TurboTuner gets it right the first time - no need to fine tune by ear."
FU.
You should try a turbotuner -- it really locks in to the pitch you are trying to tune much better than the peterson virtual strobes do. My one beef with their product is it doesn't have the capability to generate any tones.


