Posted: Fri Jul 13, 2007 2:06 pm
I think that most would agree that the Korg CA30 tuner works very well for the tuba. Woodwind and Brasswind sells it for $19.99: http://www.wwbw.com/Korg-CA30-Chromatic ... 0341.music.
I'll second that... and add that the last time I bought something bigger/more expensive than that, I lost it...Mark wrote:the Korg CA30 tuner works very well for the tuba.
Good advice. Many people I know use this tuner and seem happy with it.Mark wrote:I think that most would agree that the Korg CA30 tuner works very well for the tuba. Woodwind and Brasswind sells it for $19.99: http://www.wwbw.com/Korg-CA30-Chromatic ... 0341.music.
I have about 5 of these. One at work, a few in each bass gig bag, one in the practice room.Mark wrote:I think that most would agree that the Korg CA30 tuner works very well for the tuba. Woodwind and Brasswind sells it for $19.99: http://www.wwbw.com/Korg-CA30-Chromatic ... 0341.music.
I use the Korg, but it works better with a pickup mic. Clipped to the bell or leadpipe, you don't get interference from other instruments in the hall.ArnoldGottlieb wrote:I have about 5 of these. One at work, a few in each bass gig bag, one in the practice room.Mark wrote:I think that most would agree that the Korg CA30 tuner works very well for the tuba. Woodwind and Brasswind sells it for $19.99: http://www.wwbw.com/Korg-CA30-Chromatic ... 0341.music.
If you search online, you'll find them for about 15 bucks......
Peace.
ASG
This is a little off-topic, I think mileage varies for this quite a bit. I'm almost ridiculously happy with my Seiko met. I'll admit that it doesn't do a whole lot more than the blue Korg metronome, and is more expensive, but it's really reliable and a little sturdier than the little Korg box.adam0408 wrote:DO NOT BUY Seiko anything. Tuners or metronomes. They are a nightmare to use and are cheaply made and overpriced. I have had both a seiko metronome (lost it, thank goodness) and a seiko guitar tuner. Most guitar tuners are abysmal anyway, but this one was especially bad. AND both my met and tuner ran off nine volt batteries. Make sure to find something that takes triple as. (even though my boss tuner uses 9v batteries, it makes up for that deficiency with its good quality)
Amen to that Korg. I have one and it works well. I also have the clip on ones you refer to and it is really hard to see when attached to my tubas as I am playing them. On the lead pipe,it is too close to my eyes. It does not seem to register when attached to a valve slide. On the bell, it is too high for me to see as I play. They work well for a trombone, trumpet, woodwind, string, almost anything else but my upright valve front tubas.figaro wrote:All I have is a cheap little tuner that won't even "hear" the lower notes. On ebay they keep selling these CENTER PITCH TUNERs that clip to your horn. The idea sounds good but being low priced I wonder it they work. Has anyone had any experience with them or can anyone recommend a good tuner for under $30?
Yeah, what he said.Mark wrote:I think that most would agree that the Korg CA30 tuner works very well for the tuba. Woodwind and Brasswind sells it for $19.99: http://www.wwbw.com/Korg-CA30-Chromatic ... 0341.music.
I second this post.BBbDave wrote:If you're willing to go to $32 you might try the Korg TM40. It has the same great tuner as the CA30 and a neat metronome all in one small package. It has the same optional mike input too.
Another plus is the good battery life with the AAA batteries(not expensive button cells) and you can use rechargables if you want to be environmentally friendly
Make it into a salad with a little mayo, a few drips of lemon juice, relish, finely chopped celery and pepper, and serve between two slices of toasted rye, with the olive and toothpick in each half and a bag of cheap chips.bloke wrote:How to tune a tuba