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bobbypols
02-18-2009, 11:47 PM
For those of you who need to tune but dont have a tuner handy, just to let you know that the dial tone of a phone is F. So you can use that to tune the E string to F, then find A for the fifth string and away you go. :AOK

Thats a tip courtesy of the late Danny Gatton.

tomkatzz
02-19-2009, 08:26 AM
Lol! ;)

Born2Blues67
02-19-2009, 10:12 AM
Sounds weird enough to be true.

JonR
02-19-2009, 10:54 AM
This reminds me of stories of hippies in the 60s/70s getting free phone calls by whistling the right pitch...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phreaking

Swain
02-19-2009, 10:56 AM
Yeah, that is a pretty good method. But be careful. In some areas, the Dial Tone is an A.

Also, there's the NBC Method. At the top of every hour, they flash that little Peacock in the corner of the screen. And you hear that little 3 Note "Chime". It's a C Chord Inversion. G E C. (Odd coincidence, how General Electric Company owns NBC).

So, you can tune your guitar with the TV! LOL

e
B
G 0


e 0
B
G

e
B 1
G


;)

JSeth
02-19-2009, 01:05 PM
very cool tip - I've occaisionally had to "find a note" to tune to.. and I usually just try to hear the opening A chord of a tune of mine and go from there - but it's great to know that the telephone is waiting to assist!!! LOL!

John Seth Sherman :band

cameron
02-19-2009, 01:28 PM
I think I'm more likely to have a tuner handy when I need to tune up than a land-line phone . . .

cob666
02-19-2009, 10:21 PM
The dial tone in North America is made up of two tones F and A (350 and 440).

stevel
02-19-2009, 10:39 PM
For those of you who need to tune but dont have a tuner handy, just to let you know that the dial tone of a phone is F. So you can use that to tune the E string to F, then find A for the fifth string and away you go. :AOK

Thats a tip courtesy of the late Danny Gatton.

I'm sorry, I'm going to go with the DUH here - most new phones (cell phones people have with them, not land lines with the now old-timey dial tone) have recordings you can download called ring tones. You can actually download real songs that you may already know the key to!!!!

My old phone would let you compose your own ring - so if you figured out the pitches, you could easily put an A, an E, or E-A-D-G-B-E on it.

Likewise, Ring Tones are made with MIDI files so I bet someone could create a "Guitar Tuning ring tone" if they haven't already - let me put you on hold a moment.... ok Googled it and didn't find on immediately - but if you can make a .wav file you can apparently make one as well.

No offense to Mr. Gatton or the OP, but, with those new-fangled cell phones, there are some more accurate options.

Now if I could just play like Mr. Gatton!

Steve

Strung Up
02-19-2009, 11:12 PM
The dial tone in North America is made up of two tones F and A (350 and 440).

Zactly! All dialing through North American (and some other countries')voice switches uses DTMF - dual tone multi-frequency.

Ring Tones are triggered by a call terminating at a phone, NOT prompted by a call originating and progressing through the Public Switched Telephone Network.

BTW, the G-E-C / NBC - G.E. Corp, tone dates back to pre-vid radio days and was quite intentional as a station ID. I'd love to know who dreamt that up.

Strung Up
02-21-2009, 03:51 PM
Wrong about G.E.: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NBC_Chimes


. . .
BTW, the G-E-C / NBC - G.E. Corp, tone dates back to pre-vid radio days and was quite intentional as a station ID. I'd love to know who dreamt that up.

ESPLTD200FM
02-22-2009, 09:14 PM
I just use a guitar tuner App on my Iphone

bobbymack
02-23-2009, 08:50 PM
The old school landline phones used to ring an "E" 1....