Yes, yes you can. If you couldn't tune it like a regular guitar they probably wouldn't of put tuner pegs on the tuners.
3000
I own a black Gibson Robot SG with an ebony fret board. They're expensive to find now and cost at minimum a $1000. Try looking at guitar stores in the clearance area. I got mine for $600
You can no longer buy a Tronical PowerTune as an aftermarket addition to your guitar. Gibson signed an exclusivity contract a few years ago, so you will have to find someone selling an old PowerTune if you want one (or buy a new Robot Guitar from Gibson).
Jade Puget of AFI.
It wasn't invented in any year. It has evolved for centuries. Les Paul is a pioneer in the development of the solid-body electric guitar which "made the sound of rock and roll possible." "Guitar-shaped instruments appear in stone bas-relief sculptures of the Hittites in northern Syria and Asia Minor from as far back as 1350 B.C. The word "guitar" also has origins in the Middle and Far East, deriving from "guit," the Arabic word for four and "tar," the Sanskrit word for string."
Gibson Robot Guitar was created in 2007.
3000
Im presuming you are talking about the Gibson robot guitars. Well they can tune themselves! No need to touch the tuning pegs, just fiddle with the knobs and the mechanised tuners will do all the work.
I own a black Gibson Robot SG with an ebony fret board. They're expensive to find now and cost at minimum a $1000. Try looking at guitar stores in the clearance area. I got mine for $600
You can no longer buy a Tronical PowerTune as an aftermarket addition to your guitar. Gibson signed an exclusivity contract a few years ago, so you will have to find someone selling an old PowerTune if you want one (or buy a new Robot Guitar from Gibson).
No. I was operated manually.
No. Most cranes are controlled manually by an operator. It would only be a robot, if the crane was "automatic" - no human was controlling it.
Jade Puget of AFI.
It wasn't invented in any year. It has evolved for centuries. Les Paul is a pioneer in the development of the solid-body electric guitar which "made the sound of rock and roll possible." "Guitar-shaped instruments appear in stone bas-relief sculptures of the Hittites in northern Syria and Asia Minor from as far back as 1350 B.C. The word "guitar" also has origins in the Middle and Far East, deriving from "guit," the Arabic word for four and "tar," the Sanskrit word for string."
Either FLCL or Kikaider.
Lost in Space episode #5 "The Hungry Sea" : Robot playing "Home Sweet Home" .
Chiro, Antauri, Otto, Sprx-77(Sprx), D.r Hal Gibson(Gibson), Nova, SK(SkeletonKing), Jinmay, Valeena, and Mandarin.