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Tuning in the sunshine

GUEST,watcher 21 Sep 20 - 06:52 PM
Donuel 21 Sep 20 - 05:55 PM
Helen 21 Sep 20 - 03:03 PM
GUEST,CupOfTea at work 21 Sep 20 - 02:45 PM
Black belt caterpillar wrestler 21 Sep 20 - 02:31 PM
Helen 21 Sep 20 - 02:27 PM
CupOfTea 21 Sep 20 - 10:06 AM
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Subject: RE: Tuning in the sunshine
From: GUEST,watcher
Date: 21 Sep 20 - 06:52 PM

NO!!   Metal strings have much higher tension than the nylon or fleurocarbon strings on a uke, which is much more lightly built than the dreadnought guitars which seem common nowaday. There's a strong likelihood that the bridge will be torn off the uke.


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Subject: RE: Tuning in the sunshine
From: Donuel
Date: 21 Sep 20 - 05:55 PM

Helen by putting acoustic metal strings on a uke I increased the sustain up to 4 seconds.


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Subject: RE: Tuning in the sunshine
From: Helen
Date: 21 Sep 20 - 03:03 PM

I took the harp to the park a couple of times but then I started taking my concert ukulele, which has a deeper tone than the plinky-plunky style ukes. A lot lighter to carry and only four strings to tune.

I used to use a Korg chromatic tuner about 20 years ago but they have black on grey LCD display now. I then bought a Martinez MT500 which has the black on grey LCD but I stupidly broke it when I tried to replace the batteries so that's when I bought the Snark. The black on grey might be easier to read than the colours on the Snark.


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Subject: RE: Tuning in the sunshine
From: GUEST,CupOfTea at work
Date: 21 Sep 20 - 02:45 PM

heh. Robin, That's the second of my three instruments. It's the one I'm taking to the lakefront after work tonight. It's also LOTS lighter than the very solid autoharp & hard to tune anyway psaltery.

Someone MUST make one that's easy to read in sunshine - even shaded bright sun is mostly unreadable.


Joanne in Cleveland


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Subject: RE: Tuning in the sunshine
From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler
Date: 21 Sep 20 - 02:31 PM

Yet another advantage to playing the concertina:)

Robin


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Subject: RE: Tuning in the sunshine
From: Helen
Date: 21 Sep 20 - 02:27 PM

Hi Joanne,

I feel your pain. Because of the pandemic, from the end of March our session group had to stop meeting but from the first week of May we held a number of gatherings in a park rotunda in winter here in Australia, so the weather on each occasion was usually wet or windy, but sunny on some days too.

There were a few issues. The flute player and the tin whistle player said it was difficult to avoid the wind playing havoc with their instruments. The rotunda is a fairly long walk from the street and we each had to carry a folding chair, an instrument and other paraphernalia to set up. I envied the flute, tin whistle, fiddle and mandolin players because even though the harp I brought is smallish, it is still heavy and unwieldy.

Tuning my lever harp is usually ok for a session held indoors because I tune it before the session and it stays in tune. For the outdoor sessions I would tune it indoors before I left home and then when I set up in the outdoors the cool wind or the sun would change the tuning, but I told the rest of the group they would just have to put up with it for a couple of hours.

I have a Snark tuner which is normally easy to read but trying to read it in sunny conditions is difficult. The good thing is that the head of the tuner can be turned to a different angle to aim for better readability. Maybe you could make it a little sombrero to shade it from the sun? :-)

We now have an alternative solution. We found a small local lawn bowls club where we could use an area indoors. We can sit at the tables, socially distanced, and buy a drink from the bar, use their facilities, and not have to think about the weather. The only issue is that sometimes it is difficult to hear each other when we are having a conversation because of the social distancing. Also, with the current COVID restrictions here in NSW we have to limit our indoor gathering to 10 people, so I have to play email ping-pong with the group a few days before each session to work out who is planning to be there and who was too late letting me know and has to miss out.

We like the venue so much that even when we are able to have session gatherings at home again, we might still go to the club instead.


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Subject: Tuning in the sunshine
From: CupOfTea
Date: 21 Sep 20 - 10:06 AM

Had a lovely time playing with my band lads on Sunday, socially distanced and masked, out in a large open park field in the sun. Instruments in the sun needed lots of retuning, and a distinct problem with Snarks and other clip on tuners I've seen is they are nigh onto impossible to read out in the sun. I had my phone with a tuner app to use, but that's not great for battery usage, nor can it be clipped to Autoharp or Psaltery.

Has anyone found a brand of clip on tuner that IS readable in bright sunlight?

Joanne in Cleveland


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