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#642845 - 05/07/08 02:51 AM Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Digitus Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 11/08/06
Posts: 846
Loc: Singapore
Hi,

I have been tuning my Kawai K-8 upright to EBVT with Verituner Pocket's stretch style set to Average. I like EBVT a lot and want to use it on my coming Sauter Omega 220.

Verituner's user guide says that the Expanded style is typically used for concert grands. I suppose the Omega can be considered to be almost a concert grand, but I will try both Average and Expanded.

Does anyone have a custom style that sounds good with EBVT on a grand of about the Omega's size?

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#642846 - 05/07/08 11:59 AM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
RonTuner Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 900
Loc: Chicagoland
Yes!

This first one is based on the "Schubert concert tuning" in the book "Grand Obsession". It tends towards "calmer", or "sweeter", yet with full resonance across the span of the keyboard. (Why does that sound like a wine review??)
If you'd like to download the .vus file to your machine, I've hosted it here:
http://www.filehosting.cc/?d=CFF081AE3
The file is called "Koval one for all" (thanks, David Bauguess)
(go to the bottom, type in the letters or numbers displayed, and hit "submit")

Or, to enter it manually into your machine: (all beats set to 0.0)

A0 6:3 35% / 8:4 65%
A1 6:3 20% / 4:1 80%
C#3 6:3 30% /4:2 70%
A3/A4 4:2 77% / 2:1 23%
C#6 4:1 10% /4:2 90%
A6 4:1 63% / 4:2 37%
C8 4:1 90% /2:1 10%


and this one is my default for grand pianos in perfomance venues - it's a bit "bigger" feeling, so it might go a bit better with the EBVT.

A0 6:3 45% / 10:5 55%
E1 6:3 100%
C2 6:3 100%
A3-A4 4:2 70% / 6:3 30%
A5 4:2 50% / 4:1 50%
A6 4:2 40% / 4:1 60%
A7 4:1 100%
C8 8:1 40% / 4:1 60%

Oh, have you tried the Bach/Lehman temperament?
www.larips.com
Interesting reading!

Ron Koval
_________________________
Piano/instrument tech.
My service videos:
http://www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=drwoodwind

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#642847 - 05/07/08 12:53 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Digitus Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 11/08/06
Posts: 846
Loc: Singapore
Wow! Thanks Ron. Much appreciated.

The Bach/Lehman webbie was very interesting. Have you tried BLT (the temperament, not the sandwich) on a modern piano and with Classical and Romantic piano music?

The Omega is going into my living room, not a performance venue. Would your default grand piano stretch style be appropriate? Can you please describe what you mean by "bigger" feeling?

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#642848 - 05/07/08 01:36 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
RonTuner Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 900
Loc: Chicagoland
I actually prefer the BLT to the EBVT - I've taught a few classes where I've tuned it as well (always "well" received). There are a few of my own temperaments that are a bit more evenly balanced (KV2 or KV4) that can be found on the www.rollingball.com site under Modern Well temperaments. (Just because they are more evenly balanced does not mean they play better; just differently... YMMV)

Sure, the default grand tuning has been tuned a lot in homes, I've found that I, and many of my clients prefer a bit more intimate stretch - The All4one style slows down the busyness in the middle, while while keeping the sparkle up top. The default grand will allow the bass to go a little lower, if you like the "growl" down there.

bigger feeling = more projection, a little more energy in the middle and then spread throughout.

Try them both!

Since this is your own piano, you've got a perfect opportunity to customize what you like to get from that particular instrument - enjoy the journey!

Ron Koval
_________________________
Piano/instrument tech.
My service videos:
http://www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=drwoodwind

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#642849 - 05/07/08 01:54 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Cy Shuster Offline
2000 Post Club Member

Registered: 12/18/05
Posts: 2393
Loc: Albuquerque, NM
I just put the Bach/Lehman on my own piano, and I find it's mild enough (for my ears, anyway) for both Bach and Chopin.

--Cy--
_________________________
Cy Shuster, RPT & new grandpa (it's a girl!)
www.shusterpiano.com

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#642850 - 05/07/08 07:07 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Gadzar Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 12/15/06
Posts: 569
Loc: Mexico City
I know this is out of the subject of this thread, but I have only a question, that is not worth another specific thread.

Ron, have you any style that fits a studio Petrof P117K!, it is 46" tall.

I mean not a general purpose style like Koval One For All, but a style that fits that specific kind of piano?

Thanks...
_________________________
Rafael Melo
Piano Technician

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#642851 - 05/07/08 10:18 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Jeff A. Smith Offline
Full Member

Registered: 12/01/03
Posts: 476
Loc: Angola, IN
Digitus,

I've never tried VT's "Expanded" style with anything except equal temperament. However, I've used it on Pramberger JP-208's with very good results. In fact, I could imagine going even further with the stretch on those instruments.

Jeff
_________________________
Piano Technician, Indiana
PTG Associate Member

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#642852 - 05/07/08 10:35 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Digitus Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 11/08/06
Posts: 846
Loc: Singapore
Thanks again Ron. And to Cy for trying out BLT. Which stretch styles should I use with the BLT for the K-8 and for the Omega?

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#642853 - 05/07/08 11:15 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Digitus Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 11/08/06
Posts: 846
Loc: Singapore
Hi Ron,

The download page appears, but when I click on the download button the web server says that it can't find the requested page. No big deal, because manual entry is easy anyway. Just thought you'd like to know.

 Quote:
Originally posted by RonTuner:

If you'd like to download the .vus file to your machine, I've hosted it here:
http://www.filehosting.cc/?d=CFF081AE3
The file is called "Koval one for all" (thanks, David Bauguess)
(go to the bottom, type in the letters or numbers displayed, and hit "submit")
[/b]

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#642854 - 05/09/08 10:56 AM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
RonTuner Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 900
Loc: Chicagoland
Thanks for the note.

When I looked on the site, it did list that the file would be removed for the free service after there hadn't been any downloads for a certain period of time.

Good thing I posted the manual numbers!

Gazdar - I've only worked on a couple of Petrof uprights... the default grand tuning above worked well with both of them - and the all4one would probably be a good fit for a little more intimate feel.

Ron Koval
_________________________
Piano/instrument tech.
My service videos:
http://www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=drwoodwind

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#642855 - 05/09/08 01:50 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Digitus Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 11/08/06
Posts: 846
Loc: Singapore
 Quote:
Originally posted by Digitus:
Thanks again Ron. And to Cy for trying out BLT. Which stretch styles should I use with the BLT for the K-8 and for the Omega? [/b]
Sorry, the question should be "Has anyone programmed the BLT into Verituner?", directed generally and not to Cy. :p

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#642856 - 05/09/08 11:06 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Gadzar Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 12/15/06
Posts: 569
Loc: Mexico City
Thanks Ron, I've not tryed the Koval one for all style on this piano, but I 've tuned it with your "Small" Style and the "Moore" temperament and it sounds great!

I've tryed your Koval one for all style in a small console Melodygrand and it sounds fine, though too calm for my test, I prefer the "Small" style.

I was just wondering if I can find another style that fits this particular piano (the Petrof).

The "Small" style is a generic style and I've supposed that it would be possible to design a better style specifically for this piano...

I've tryed designing my own styles, but they don't work fine. When trying the styles you have published in the Verituner Users Forum, and also other's people styles, they work better than those I've designed. I just don't have the touch, I guess...


Regards.
_________________________
Rafael Melo
Piano Technician

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#642857 - 05/22/08 09:43 AM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Bill Bremmer RPT Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/21/02
Posts: 1311
Loc: Madison, WI USA
I'm not at all sure the correction figures provided in the Verituner program are correct. These figures were recently reviewed by Owen Jorgensen. There are three different versions of the EBVT. The correction figures can be seen on my website at www.billbremmer.com under the EBVT tab.

I am not a Verituner user, so I can't recommend the stretch values for that device. However, I would say that when I use these correction figures with my SAT III, I get a good tuning but I never do get that very special effect I get when I tune aurally and/or store that tuning with the way I uniquely stretch the octaves and the partial selection I use.

The effect I am talking about is this "pipe organ" type of sound that you hear when a full keyboard C Major arpeggio is played after tuning and you listen to the chord as it decays. The other simple keys will do it too. As far as I know, no calculated stretch can provide this. However, you may be able to come close and if you know what you are doing, you can aurally correct the calculated stretch to truly re-create what I do when tuning aurally.

The aural octave stretch is fully described in the post, "Beginner Question" now currently on this list. I will also be demonstrating this way of tuning at the upcoming PTG Convention in Anaheim, CA, on Saturday, June 21, 1:30 PM in the Garden 2 room.

I hope to see many of you there!
_________________________
Bill Bremmer RPT
Madison WI USA
www.billbremmer.com

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#642858 - 05/22/08 12:01 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Gadzar Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 12/15/06
Posts: 569
Loc: Mexico City
Bill,

I've tryed to design a style that follows your aural octave stretch with the Verituner, but no way! The partials involved in the intervals that you use to check are not available in the Verituner style design mode at those points in the scale.

Maybe Ron Koval can succed as he has a lot of experience in designing Verituner styles...
_________________________
Rafael Melo
Piano Technician

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#642859 - 05/22/08 12:10 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Gadzar Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 12/15/06
Posts: 569
Loc: Mexico City
Bill,

I think you are mixing two different concepts:

1.- The temperament
2.- The style

The temperament is the correction figures you talk about: that is 12 offsets, one for each note of the octave.

The style refers to how much we stretch the intervals all along the scale of the piano.

For the Accutuner III it is almost the same I guess: first you pick up a Temperament, with the 12 offsets, and then you work on the "style" by adjusting and re-touching the FAC values for the specific piano's iH.

I am not an Accutuner III user, correct me please if I miss understand it.
_________________________
Rafael Melo
Piano Technician

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#642860 - 05/22/08 12:51 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
RonTuner Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 900
Loc: Chicagoland
Yes Bill, the "pipe organ" effect is a good explanation of what I'm after as well.

I've toyed with the idea of writing a Journal article explaining why I think it is difficult to get "there" with most of the tuning gear out there - I just hesitate to step on anyone's toes...

I give a hint: Picture a typical machine calculated curve - generally a smooth curve rising to the right, following the offsets for each successive single partial. Cool, fine and dandy.

Next, if one was to take the time to measure the other partials that are sounding for each note and graph them on top of the tuning calculation, there would be an interesting phenomenon. None of the other curves would be a smooth curve! By forcing one partial into a smooth curve, all the other partial relationships are compromised.

To get that pipe organ effect requires balancing multiple partial relationships during the tuning process. Hmmmm, what's advertised as a multi-partial tuner?? Even so, in the default mode, it mimics the approach of the older generation of gear. The custom style approach opens the door to the next level.

Ron Koval
_________________________
Piano/instrument tech.
My service videos:
http://www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=drwoodwind

Top
#642861 - 05/22/08 01:20 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Digitus Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 11/08/06
Posts: 846
Loc: Singapore
Bill: Pardon my ignorance but can you please try to describe this "pipe organ" effect?

Ron: Am I reading between the lines of your post correctly that you might already have programmed a stretch style that gets close to the desired result? Is it the "bigger feeling" style you gave in response to my original post?

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#642862 - 05/22/08 01:21 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Gadzar Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 12/15/06
Posts: 569
Loc: Mexico City
 Quote:
Posted by Ron Koval:

To get that pipe organ effect requires balancing multiple partial relationships during the tuning process. Hmmmm, what's advertised as a multi-partial tuner?? Even so, in the default mode, it mimics the approach of the older generation of gear. The custom style approach opens the door to the next level.
Yes, I think that's the way Verituner is conceived, multi-partial tuning. But I am affraid there is a long way to go before reaching it.

I had never got that "pipe organ effect"
I guess I have to go to a PTG meeting to hear that.
_________________________
Rafael Melo
Piano Technician

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#642863 - 05/22/08 02:06 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Bill Bremmer RPT Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/21/02
Posts: 1311
Loc: Madison, WI USA
I'm just home for a quick lunch, so I don't have time to write much now. The "pipe organ" effect means simply that as you listen to a very broad, sustained arpeggio chord played from the lowest to the highest part of the piano, the decaying chord sounds as if a pipe organ were playing it.

I believe this particular sound we associate with a pipe organ comes from the fact that the pipes have no inharmonicity. Therefore, all of the partials line up nicely. The purpose of stretching the octaves is to do that. I'm afraid that most aural tuners are too narrowly focused in their stretching, however. If you know how do do what I do which is still a very simple matter, an optimum alignment of partials occurs so all of the partials across the whole piano line up much better and you get that same effect you hear from a pipe organ playing a broad, sustained chord using multiple octave pipes.

More later if I can fins the time this evening. I think I do have some ideas about how the Verituner can be manipulated but since I don't use that device, I'll have to rely on Ron to see if he can interpret what I say into a custom programming for that device. The only way I can do it with the SAT is by the Direct Interval method using a different partial selection from the default. It's still not difficult but most users of that device no nothing of the DIrect Interval method even though it has been in the manual since the very earliest version of that device.
_________________________
Bill Bremmer RPT
Madison WI USA
www.billbremmer.com

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#642864 - 05/22/08 03:26 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Gadzar Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 12/15/06
Posts: 569
Loc: Mexico City
Bill,

When I have finished tuning a piano I make a lot of tests of course but there is one I use to do that pleases me very much if it's achieved:

I press down the damper pedal and play a forte note in the middle of the scale, and hear to the resonance of all the strings beeing free to vibrate. If I hear beats I try to find the note/notes that is causing them among the partials of the note I played.

Sometimes, raretimes, I get a pure sound, without noticeable beats in it, that is really beautifull.

I wonder that is what you call "pipe organ effect", not limited to a single note but extended to a broad sustained arpegio chord covering the hole extent of the keyboard.
_________________________
Rafael Melo
Piano Technician

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#642865 - 05/23/08 07:31 AM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
UprightTooner Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 12/21/07
Posts: 839
Loc: North-East US
All:

This Topic is great! I like the term "Pipe Organ Effect" and it's definition.

I wonder how much the characteristics of the mike on an ETD will matter in a situation like this. Not only the frequency, but also the volume of the partials may be important.

Regards,
_________________________
Part-time tuner

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#642866 - 05/23/08 11:37 AM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
BDB Online   content
Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member

Registered: 06/07/03
Posts: 10850
Loc: Oakland
 Quote:
...the decaying chord sounds as if a pipe organ were playing it.
If it sounded like a pipe organ, it would not be decaying.
_________________________
Semipro Tech

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#642867 - 05/25/08 01:20 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Bill Bremmer RPT Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/21/02
Posts: 1311
Loc: Madison, WI USA
 Quote:
Originally posted by BDB:
 Quote:
...the decaying chord sounds as if a pipe organ were playing it.
If it sounded like a pipe organ, it would not be decaying. [/b]
This typical of the nearly 8,000 posts by BDB: a one liner that dismisses the entire subject in a most condescending way. I notice that BDB joined nearly a year after I did and has made almost 8,000 posts but I have barely made 800. Ten times as many in a year's less time. How many out of these thousands upon thousands of posts have been helpful to anyone? How many were arrogant an patronizing quips with the sole intention of demonstrating how deep and profound his knowledge is and how the rest of us are mere idiots in comparison?

It's fairly typical of the kind of guy who calls himself a piano technician but is "too good" to join PTG much less take the RPT Exams. There is only one reason for it: he has nothing to gain and everything to lose. He would find out with blunt force trauma that he isn't as good and knowledgeable tech as he wants you to think he is. It matters little that the exam results and even if they were attempted is confidential. HE would know and that would be far too much to bear.

In other words, BDB, SHUT UP!
_________________________
Bill Bremmer RPT
Madison WI USA
www.billbremmer.com

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#642868 - 05/25/08 02:01 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
BDB Online   content
Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member

Registered: 06/07/03
Posts: 10850
Loc: Oakland
I made a simple statement about pipe organs merely to show that the language was being used incorrectly, and you get your panties all in a knot.

The fact remains: Pianos have attack, decay and release, with no sustain, while pipe organs have attack, sustain and release, with no decay (swell being a modification of the sustain). I was trying to understand what was meant by a pipe organ sound, and that explanation made no sense.

Perhaps it is time that other people learned a bit about acoustics and other physics. Maybe they should do the math.

Then perhaps they would learn the real problem with this discussion: If stretch is the amount of deviation due to inharmonicity, then it depends on the individual piano. If stretch is because the tuner likes wider than theoretic or acoustic intervals, then it depends on the tuner. Neither of these are things that should be programmed into a tuning device.
_________________________
Semipro Tech

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#642869 - 05/25/08 02:57 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Bill Bremmer RPT Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/21/02
Posts: 1311
Loc: Madison, WI USA
 Quote:
Originally posted by Gadzar:
Bill,

Sometimes, raretimes, I get a pure sound, without noticeable beats in it, that is really beautifull.

I wonder that is what you call "pipe organ effect", not limited to a single note but extended to a broad sustained arpegio chord covering the hole extent of the keyboard. [/b]
Possibly, I am not sure. I get the effect when I play a long, C, G, F, Bb, D, Eb, or A major sustained arpeggio across the entire keyboard. I have also heard the same effect when tuning in ET but it seems a bit less pronounced. I believe I only hear it in the milder keys of a Well Temperament and the effect is most pronounced in the mildest, C Major. In ET, every major key has the approximate tone color that a Well Temperament has in A Major. That is why I think I still can hear it in ET but it is less vividly displayed, as it is in A Major in the EBVT.

Gadzar, I believe you said before that I seemed to be confusing temperament with octave stretching and I can see why you may think that but I assure you that I do not. The way that I stretch the octaves is quite simple: I make an exact compromise between the double octave below the note to be tuned and the octave and the 5th (12th) below the octave to be tuned. This serves to utilize the piano's inharmonicity to minimize the effect of the Pythagorean comma.

I am not the only person to do this. It is done by many very fine aural tuners whom I know. If it is done when tuning ET, the curve of the stretched octaves will naturally be smooth. However, if the method is employed using an unequal temperament, the amount of stretch in the octaves will vary irregularly from one note to the next.

For example, if I tune C5 from C4 first as a reasonable sounding single octave, then I compare C5 to C3 and then to F3, the point where C5 will sound in tune with both C3 and F3 will amount to very little stretch between C4 to C5. That is because the F3-C4 5th is beatless (pure) in the EBVT.

On the other hand, when D5 is tuned to D4 first as a reasonable sounding octave, then D5 is compared to both D3 and G3, to have an equal beating compromise so that D3-D5 and G3-D5 have the same amount of tempering, the D4-D5 octave will be significantly wider than the C4-C5 octave.

In ET, the equal beating double octave and octave and 5th will be very close to each other and very consistent to the highest and lowest ends of the piano's scale.

The EBVT belongs to the category of well temperaments known as "irregular". This may seem to be an undesirable characteristic but in my experience, it is the irregular well temperaments which are the most interesting. The Thomas Young #1 well temperament has perfect symmetry and all of the tempered 5ths are tempered by the same amount (the definition of "regular") but to me, even though the idea sounds good theoretically and looks good on paper, it is the most bland and uninteresting sounding of all well-temperaments, so I have never used it for any of my clients.

So, in stretching the octaves in the way I have described, a graph would reveal a jagged line and not a smooth curve. Indeed, as I program the results into my SAT III, the figures from one note to the next go up and down, the higher in the scale I go, the more significantly different the figures from one note to the next become.

It doesn't appear to be logical and many other technicians have questioned it. They ask, "Doesn't that negate the temperament?", the answer is no, it does not, it enhances it. A calculated stretch curve can only increase the amount of stretch in an orderly progression. With temperament correction figures applied, the figures for all notes, including the highest ones do go up and down but only reflecting the the deviations supplied by the correction figures themselves.

So, as I had said in another post, when I use the correction figures for the EBVT with the SAT III's FAC program, I do get a good sounding tuning but it is never as good as when I manually compute the amount of stretch for each note individually. The latter is simply done.

I must first change the partial selection for Octave 5 to read on Octave 5 (not Octave 6 as it does by default). Then, I set the device on the note to be tuned and play the already tuned notes a double octave and then an octave and 5th below it. In the example of tuning C5, both notes from which C5 is tuned form a beatless 4th in the temperament octave, C3 and F3. The pattern will stop for both C3 and F3 when reading C5. In the example of tuning D5, the point is found where the pattern rolls sharp for D3 by the same amount as it rolls flat for G3 and D5 is tuned to that finding. This is virtually the same result as is obtained by tuning both of these intervals to beat exactly the same when tuning aurally.

The clarity and gentle phasing effect that is heard when playing a broad and sustained C Major arpeggio which sounds to me very much like that of a pipe organ, I believe is the result of the equal beating technique. As with other examples such as in the midrange where equal beating intervals create a canceling out effect and make C Major, for example, sound as if it is a much less tempered and has more pure interval construction than it really does, the canceling out effect of equal beating double octaves and 12ths has the same effect in the outer octaves. Much less "busy beating" is heard and seemingly only "pure", nearly beatless (only a gentle, slow phase)tones are heard which makes the sustained chord sound as pure and pristine as a pipe organ sound.

It is indeed ironic how many of my most musically sophisticated clients have voluntarily said virtually the same thing to me: the chords sound so smooth and even and the octaves sound so pure. This, in spite of the fact that the temperament is deliberately and intentionally uneven and the octaves are anything but pure and are also quite radically inconsistent. It amounts to an illusion which is analogous to what a magician creates by slight of hand deception. But it is not something false, it is a very real effect created by the phenomenon of what I consider to be the most valuable asset in tuning: EQUAL BEATING!

For anyone trying to use correction figures for a calculated tuning, please use the following figures which were painstakingly corrected recently by Owen Jorgensen. They are probably not what has been provided in either the Verituner or in Tunelab Temperament offset programs. Anyone interested should either create a new file or overwrite what is there.

C +3.8
C# -1.3
D +0.9
D# +1.6
E -0.6
F +1.8
F# -0.3
G +3.1
G# +0.7
A 0.0
A# +2.9
B 0.0

Note: there was a very minor discrepancy between what Jason Kanter figured for the note E which he calculated at -0.4 but Owen Jorgensen figured at -0.6. I prefer the figure by Owen Jorgensen but the difference is quite small and not very significant.
_________________________
Bill Bremmer RPT
Madison WI USA
www.billbremmer.com

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#642870 - 05/25/08 03:09 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Bill Bremmer RPT Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/21/02
Posts: 1311
Loc: Madison, WI USA
BDB, you go ahead and think what you think and tune the piano whatever way you think is right. Meanwhile, I'll do what I have been doing for a couple of decades now and which I learned from fellow PTG members. If you want to show everybody your way, teach math, physics and the difference between a pipe organ and a piano, contact the PTG Institute Committee and see if they will take you up on it for the next annual convention.
_________________________
Bill Bremmer RPT
Madison WI USA
www.billbremmer.com

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#642871 - 06/02/08 11:46 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Gadzar Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 12/15/06
Posts: 569
Loc: Mexico City
Bill,

I am affraid I've got surpassed by your knowledge. I don't understand what you say.

I have only tuned EBVT using Verituner. I don't know how to tune it aurally.

I don't understand why C4-C5 is less stretched than D4-D5, but don't worry it is not because of you, it is because of me. I have a lot of things to learn.

BTW, in my Verituner I have a temperament called: "Bremmer EBVT, 1992", in which the offsets are:

C 3.80
C# -0.77
D 0.86
D# 3.14
E -1.98
F 1.84
F# -2.72
G 3.11
G# 1.19
A 0.00
A# 2.36
B -0.03

Are you the author of this temperament?

As you can see the the numbers are quite different for D#, E, and F#.
_________________________
Rafael Melo
Piano Technician

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#642872 - 06/03/08 07:51 AM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
UprightTooner Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 12/21/07
Posts: 839
Loc: North-East US
Bill & BDB:

I value the contributions of each of you.

 Quote:
Originally posted by BDB:
...

If stretch is the amount of deviation due to inharmonicity, then it depends on the individual piano. If stretch is because the tuner likes wider than theoretic or acoustic intervals, then it depends on the tuner. Neither of these are things that should be programmed into a tuning device. [/b]
This is something I’ve wondered about. Since I don’t have access to an ETD, I can’t experiment and decide for myself. But it seems that if there is a typical stretch that the human ear wants to hear, a piano’s iH might be designed to match it. Then again, it might not be possible.

Also, it seems that if the iH of all the strings in a piano where the same, there would not be any discussion of octave types. If one octave type were tuned beatless, they would all be beatless. And theoretical beat rates would be very close to being correct. Since the iH in a piano’s strings do change from note to note, the desired amount of stretch (not just octaves, but all intervals) depends not only on the pianos iH and the listeners desire to hear a certain pitch, but also how complex the listener prefers the interaction of the partials to be.

This “Pipe Organ Sound” is something that I like, but I only hear it from old uprights. But when I do, it’s at the expense of the high treble not being at the pitch I want it to be. Bill’s technique of having equal beating partials that cancel each other out (that is my interpretation of what was posted) sounds great. But then how often would my customers play a big arpeggio and then listen to it? And back to BDB’s statement, would the pitch of the high treble be where a listener wants it to be?

Regards,
_________________________
Part-time tuner

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#642873 - 06/04/08 10:44 AM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
Bill Bremmer RPT Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/21/02
Posts: 1311
Loc: Madison, WI USA
Gadzar, yes, I am the author of the EBVT but I have not been able to calculate the offsets for my aural description of it myself and have depended on others to do that. There have been two adjustments to the original version of the EBVT which effectively create three different versions of it. I changed the setting of the note E4 (in the aural version) first which created the EBVT II, then I changed the setting of F#3 which created the EBVT III.

The EBVT III is the version I now use, it is the mildest and most well balanced. However, I sometimes still use the original which has some other favorable characteristics.

I don't know where the figures supplied in the Verituner program come from. They are an interpretation of the aural instructions as are those supplied in the Tunelab program. Obviously, the goal of these figures it to produce the same results as one would get when tuning aurally.

Recently, I had Owen Jorgensen take another look at the whole idea according to the aural instrucions as they are now available on my website. The figures I wrote in a previous post are the best information I have to date. You can either make a new temperament page in your Verituner Temperaments Offsets program and label it EBVT III or simply overwrite the figures that are there for "EBVT".

You can, of course, use the default stretch which the Verituner has, or a custom stretch that you know and prefer or one which Ron Koval recommends.

What I have noticed when I use the default stretch program of the SAT III is that while it produces a nice tuning, it does not have the very pleasing quality that I get when I tune aurally or construct the outer octaves the way I prefer to do by direct interval.

So, when you use the figures I supplied, you can expect to get something like what I do but not entirely.

Now, to what BDB says. Yes, he does often write good tips and give good advice and correct information. However, he seems to also enjoy dismissing nearly everything I write with a condescending, one line quip. When he does this, you can be sure it means that he doesn't know what he is talking about and he does it as a defensive reaction to something he doesn't understand. Rather than asking a question, he would rather try to make it seem that if he doesn't already know a particular item of information, then it must not exist.

The fact is, that the amount of stretch I use is determined purely and solely from the inharmonicity that any particular piano has. I don't simply stretch the octaves wildly sharp just because I think that sounds good the way BDB would have you think I do. The way I stretch does put beats between single octaves in the high treble, yes. But since BDB cannot hear a piano I have tuned, he only imagines it to be something crazy and is quick to say just that and then to profess that the way HE tunes the high treble is and can be the only one and correct way.

However, the way HE tunes the high treble puts beats to the narrow side between 12ths, double and triple octaves. To most people, that sounds flat. Of course, I understand what he does and can do it if I choose and there are indeed circumstances when I do just that or make some other kind of compromise somewhere in between.

BDB dismisses the very idea of the "pipe organ effect" for one reason only: he has never heard it and therefore, if he doesn't know about it, it couldn't possibly exist. He will never hear it because the way he stretches the octaves cannot even come close to producing that kind of sound.

One important thing should be considered about the high treble: this is not the area where harmony is played. The beats produced between single octaves that occur when triple octaves are beatless are generally not perceived by the pianist. They kind of playing that occurs in the high treble is generally ornamental. The higher pitch of a greater amount of stretch not only incorporates natural inharmonicity, it serves to please the desire of virtually all musicians to hear these pitches much higher than theoretical calculation would put them.

Personally, I believe the reason people want to hear pitches that high also does not come out of thin air, it is because the ear perceives inharmonicity subconciously. The 8th partial of C5 at or near theoretical pitch will be near +50 cents, so I believe that people do hear that whether they express it in words or not and therefore, the note C8 tuned at or near +50 cents is exactly what they expect to hear.

Even the most conservative stretch used by the PTG Tuning Exam produces a C8 at or near +30 cents. When I write that, BDB flies off the handle and says it just can't be right. It can't be because he believes there is not nearly as much inharmonicity in piano strings as there really is and that is because he never looks beyond the second partial when putting figures on a spreadsheet. Spreadsheets aren't pianos.
_________________________
Bill Bremmer RPT
Madison WI USA
www.billbremmer.com

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#642874 - 06/04/08 12:02 PM Re: Verituner stretch style for EBVT on a 220cm grand?
UprightTooner Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 12/21/07
Posts: 839
Loc: North-East US
Bill:

I am sorry that BDB’s posts offend you.

Thank you for explaining more on how and why you stretch your octaves.

I have it in my mind that there are two kinds of octave stretch: Objective as required by a piano’s iH and Subjective as required by the human ear. I believe this is true because of how the pitch of a high treble note after playing a full keyboard arpeggio sounds different (to me) depending on whether the arpeggio is played up or down the keyboard. Then again, perhaps (as you say) the human ear hears the higher partials and expects the octaves to be at those pitches. I don’t think this is the case because of what I hear on old uprights. It is very easy to get nice sounding double, triple and quadruple octaves. I understand now that it is due to low iH. Yet on these pianos, the arpeggio test results in the treble note being intolerably low in pitch. And also there are certain spinets that require very little stretch, beyond what is required for iH, for the arpeggio test to result in a very acceptable high treble note.

I’ve been trying different octave stretches on the pianos I tune. My customers cannot tell any difference, so I don’t feel guilty for experimenting. After having tried as much stretch as I can stand from right in the temperament octave, I’ve been leaning more to what I understand is the Schubert tuning. I keep the middle octaves very conservative, and stretch the octaves as needed for my subjective ear starting around the treble break. Oddly, I find that I don’t need as much stretch in the high treble. It seems that my ear finds the less wide octaves in the low treble to be the norm and doesn’t expect them to be as stretched in the high treble. Of course I have only my own ears to judge this.

Something that I wasn’t expecting when tuning conservative octaves is the difference in the color of the 5ths. On old uprights they sound fine, but on more modern pianos they sound busier. I am thinking that this may be a limit on how conservative the temperament octave should be.

Now, instead of only making a compromise between what I call the Objective and Subjective Octaves, I may also have to compromise for the busyness of the 5ths.

Regards,
_________________________
Part-time tuner

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