<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="1"><tr><td class="SmallText"><b>rgraff wrote on Wed, 11 April 2007 01:45</b></td></tr><tr><td class="quote">
I have no idea what that means it sounds like stereo instructions lol all I wanna know is if tuning to 440 is standard and then what is flat tuning and what 435 is etc and explain calibrate and flat tuning etc please
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I guess I'm confused about what you're asking? If you're asking "What does it mean to be flat or sharp?" then to be "flat" means that the tone produced by a string is lower than the one you are trying to produce, and to be sharp is when the tone is higher than the desired tone.
Tuning A to 440 will put you at A above middle C. That's an ISO standard (ISO 16, specifically). Go find a piano keyboard, find the C in the middle, work your way up to the next A, and that's 440hz. That is where you should put your A string.
If you tune that string to some number below 440, it will be flat. 435 is flat. 445 will be sharp.
If you fret E string at the 5th fret, that will also be A, and therefore 440hz.
But I wouldn't try to pin a specific frequency on a specific tone, other than A. I'd go buy an auto tuner, and use that.
Someday we'll win this thing...
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