Anyone use software and a mic to tune their piano? i've got a tuning hammer, and i'm gonna borrow a friends laptop so i can try and use the "Entropy Piano Tuner" http://piano-tuner.org/ that creates a stretched inharmonicity tuning for you after recording all your keys. i guess the idea is that by randomizing the variation between keys, you create a piano that doesn't go out of tune as fast, as the tunings drift, they're not as distinguishable or something.
anyways, what have your results been with this?
I've used tunelab but that cost quite a bit of money.
>>1073595
Why not just get a fake piano? It feels pretty much the same and it sounds decent enough.
>>1073777
Why not get a harbor freight impact drill. It feels pretty much the same as a dewalt and it works decent enough
Fuck's sake, use your cell phone.
>>1073595
>http://piano-tuner.org/
Neat, but try /mu?
I'd be concerned that most mics are pieces of shit until you start spending 100+ bucks. But they might be good enough, you're only playing one tone at a time.
Mics and software take the average of the dominant frequencies so there is a variation present.
>>1073777
Congrats, dumbest comment I've read in a while. And I went to visit /pol/
Hey, since we're on the topic of instruments, anyone know of good organ music that gives you good feels and has a good amount of low notes. Pic related, I've always wanted to visit a cathedral and listen to one.