User Recommended Violin Tuners
StroboClip HDC
$79.99
StroboStomp Mini
$119.00
StroboStomp LE
$169.00
StroboPLUS HDC
$179.99
StroboStomp HD
$149.00
StroboClip HD
$59.99
StroboPLUS HD
$149.99
iStroboSoft™ (iOS)
$9.99
StroboSoft 2.0
$49.99 - $99.99
Strobe Tuning a Violin
Violinists have a love/hate relationship with electronic tuners for good reason, up to now most electronic tuners made have the wrong settings for tuning a violin correctly, the interval spacing between the strings of a violin is slightly wider than electronic tuners indicate, this is astonishingly true even for tuners which are marketed specifically to violinists!
The violin is tuned to the notes G D A E with the lowest open string pitch being G and the highest pitch being E. The intervals G to D, D to A and A to E on a correctly tuned violin are all Perfect Fifth intervals. The interval G to D, D to A and A to E on an electronic tuner are Equally Tempered Fifths, so what does that mean?
The notes that make a perfect fifth interval are in total consonance with one another, there is no oscillation or beating heard when played together. The notes that make up an equally tempered fifth are not in consonance with one another and a slight oscillation or beating will be heard when played together. Equally Tempered fifths are 1.9 cents narrower than perfect fifths and the cumulative error caused by tuning using a tuner without a Violin Sweetener can be as much as six cents in the case of a five string violin, a totally unacceptable result.
So why would a tuner manufacturer make tuners which don’t really tune?
The answer is two-fold:
1. Its cheaper to use a generic “one size fits all” system like Equal Temperament for tuners, specifics pertaining to interval tuning of certain instruments including violin are simply ignored. An unnatural rather than natural tuning is the result.
2. Accuracy is required in order to display multiple types of interval tuning, impossible on a typical low resolution tuner display The result is that violinists don’t like tuners, they tune by ear. Tuning by ear is not a problem when time and ambient noise allows. It is however a problem when working professionally in an orchestra pit, studio or live situation where time is tight, standards exacting and conditions less than optimal.
If you are someone who plays professionally, then tuning will be a consideration and a tuner that works professionally is what you need. Peterson tuners feature the correct interval tuning target displays for violin, just dial in the VLN Sweetener and let the tuner do the work for you!