![]() Here is a chart and paragraph that explains this in much greater detail and may reflect the out-of-tune notes you're hearing: Īlso, most keys on a piano strike multiple strings (bichords and trichords and-very rarely on a few pianos by Borgato-tetrachords), and each part of the "unison" or group of strings will be tuned slightly differently to help make even more intervals consonant and referred to as unison width. Most technicians will use hardware specifically programmed with those slight changes to tune for some strings when servicing an instrument. While modern piano tuning is much closer to a true equal temperament than historical tuning, it isn't exact in the way that other instruments are tuned to be exact. ![]() In practice there is no real "equal temperament" for piano like there is for instruments-especially the organ, because of how they're designed and built, each note is slightly off of equal temperament to keep intervals-especially octaves-as "consonant" as possible. Does your app show which keys are out of tune and by how much? (The best indicator is in "cents" for piano tuning.)
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