The best way to get those E notes is to use a piano. Another way, just as good, is to use another tuned guitar.
The exact range varies from guitar to guitar, it depends on the total number of frets available and the number of strings(yes, even some classical guitars have extended range). My classical has 18 frets over 6 strings which results in a range from E2(open top E string when tuned to standard) to B6 on the 18th fret of the high E string.
you have to use A on the piano to tune your violin on A and put 4 fingers on E to tune E and so on and you cannot use a guitar tuner
440
Top string is the E string jus tune it like any regular E string haha
Although there are many ways to tune a guitar, standard tuning is E, A, D, G, B, e.
The best way to get those E notes is to use a piano. Another way, just as good, is to use another tuned guitar.
This is kind of a broad question. Some guitar strings are nylon (classical guitar) or steel (acoustic). For standard tuning, from top to bottom the strings are E A D G B E.
standard I believe, all depends on who you listen to as who doesn't play in standard these days and every tab you find is usually in standard E tuning.
The exact range varies from guitar to guitar, it depends on the total number of frets available and the number of strings(yes, even some classical guitars have extended range). My classical has 18 frets over 6 strings which results in a range from E2(open top E string when tuned to standard) to B6 on the 18th fret of the high E string.
you have to use A on the piano to tune your violin on A and put 4 fingers on E to tune E and so on and you cannot use a guitar tuner
"E" "A" "D" "G" "B" "E" is standard tuning, with the first E being the thickest string, the A being the next one, and so on.
440
from the bottom E-string and just do it backwards
Top string is the E string jus tune it like any regular E string haha
grab a tuner and check if the strings are in tune. Perhaps that ones out of tune.
Standard tuning for a guitar is key of "E".