The NS Micro also features an easy-to-read color changing backlit display which is easily seen on dark stages or in direct sunlight. Combined with a reversible screen, the NS Micro is equally at home on the front or back of the headstock, making it the ideal choice for the widest variety of players and instruments, including guitar, bass, ukulele, banjo, mandolin, and more. With an upgraded and adjustable padded clamp, the NS Micro offers optimal viewing angles and maximum positioning flexibility to clip on a wide variety of instruments. The compact design allows the tuner to hide effortlessly behind the headstock, concealing it from your audience and allowing it to remain mounted on the instrument inside most cases. The highly accurate piezo sensor and backlit display allow for smooth and fast chromatic tuning in noisy, dim or well-lit environments, where other tuners fail. Celtic, U.K.The D’Addario NS Micro Clip-On Tuner discretely tunes a wide variety of stringed instruments in a compact, lightweight, and easy-to-use design.Jazz/Blues Variants, Bossa, Choro, Klezmer.Old-Time, Roots, Early Country, Cajun, Tex-Mex.Rock, Folk Rock, Roots Rock, Rockabilly.Bluegrass, Newgrass, Country, Gospel Variants.Technique, Theory, Playing Tips and Tricks.Jams, Workshops, Camps, Places To Meet Others.Looking for Information About Mandolins.Still, it's really cool I think that you discovered it in yours. So.my guess is that mine does not have that feature.hidden or otherwise. Looks like yours is showing two 'sharp' symbols. Also mine shows a 'sharp' symbol as well as a 'flat' symbol simultaneously. My 'cryptic-screen' is entirely green with none of the orange hue I see in your pictures. My tuner looks exactly like yours in outward appearance but your display is slightly different than mine. I was able to get the 'cryptic-screen' as you call it, but no success with the display flip. Hey Andy.Thanks again for the info, especially thanks for taking the time to post the photos. Last edited by AndyPanda Feb-28-2017 at 9:35pm. I was able to repeat it several times in a row but it still may be some specific timing in how long you hold before you release that I'm not sure of. When you turn it back on it should be flipped. I tried about 10 times and manged to flip the screen upside down and back again twice out of 10 tries.ĮDIT: Ah, I tried turning it on, then holding down first the A=440 button then pressing power and holding both buttons down (you should see the cryptic screen) and then releasing the power button and it shuts down. It doesn't always work so I'm sure there's a specific sequence that I'm getting by accident. then I let off the power button while still holding the pitch button. then press the power button you get a strange screen that shows the battery and bunch of other cryptic symbols. but by turning it off then pressing the right button (change A=440) and hold it. I tried to figure out the exact sequence and I cannot say for sure what it is. I guess if it can be used reliably there it can be used just about anywhere it will fit. I remember seeing Thile use one so in checking a recent PHC video it looks like he has one mounted with screen on top to the Loar's small scroll just above the D tuning peg. I've found this makes it easiest see the screen even though my hand gets in the way tuning the Ds. On my Northfield, which is what I play 95% of the time, there are a few options but I have it mounted at the top right where the scroll starts. On others my main concern is aesthetic in not obscuring any inlay. On some of mine there's a very small area it will fit (I prefer to have the screen on the back of the headstock) so there's not much of an option. Which causes me to wonder if there's an optimal location for mounting it on a particular instrument. Right now it's living on my mandola.Nope, never had that problem even when swapping mine between 4 mandos, 3 guitars, a banjo and a uke. It doesn't sound like anybody else has had that issue.so maybe I need to try again. The display and accuracy all seemed fine.īUT, I seemed to have a lot of issues with buzzing on the headstock from it, so I went back to a black Snark. I liked the one I got with a box of 4 sets of strings a while back.
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