340 hz is the pitch or note that is sounding. It's the times the string would vibrate per second. By 350 hz guitar, I would get you would be playing a note on the low E string and it would sound sharp to the tuning fork. You would hear a subtle beat or pulsing when sounded together. That beat would get slower and slower as you loosened the string to bring the pitch down until it quit altogether. Your would then have that note tuned to 340 hz. BTW...standard tuning is called A440 meaning that the A note is tuned to 440hz.
To measure the velocity of frequency of a tuning fork using a sonometer, you first strike the tuning fork to produce a sound and then place it near the sonometer wire. The sonometer consists of a vibrating string that can be adjusted in length. By adjusting the length of the string until it resonates with the frequency of the tuning fork, you can measure the length of the vibrating segment. The velocity of the wave on the string can then be calculated using the formula (v = f \times \lambda), where (f) is the frequency of the tuning fork and (\lambda) is the wavelength determined by the length of the vibrating string.
Mostly the guitar's D tuned 7 string guitars and David silveria's drum tuning
Depends on how many strings the guitar has, A regular six string guitar will have six, a seven string guitar will have seven, a twelve string guitar will have twelve. Same thing with bass guitars Regular four string has four tuning pegs where as a five string bass has five,
Most tuning forks are designed to resonate at 440 hertz when struck. That is the frequency of the A before middle C on a keyboard or the A string on a guitar, violin, etc. You just strike the tuning fork then adjust the tension on your A string until the string vibrates at the same frequency as the tuning fork. Then you tune the rest of your strings from the A string.
To restring an acoustic guitar you have to drop the end if the string in the bridge and replace the pin. Then string it through the tuning post, kink it, and tune it.
To measure the velocity of frequency of a tuning fork using a sonometer, you first strike the tuning fork to produce a sound and then place it near the sonometer wire. The sonometer consists of a vibrating string that can be adjusted in length. By adjusting the length of the string until it resonates with the frequency of the tuning fork, you can measure the length of the vibrating segment. The velocity of the wave on the string can then be calculated using the formula (v = f \times \lambda), where (f) is the frequency of the tuning fork and (\lambda) is the wavelength determined by the length of the vibrating string.
To change the frequency of a guitar string, you would adjust the tension on the string by turning the tuning pegs. Tightening the string increases the frequency, while loosening it decreases the frequency. Tune the string to the desired pitch using a guitar tuner or by ear.
The tuning of the 6th string on a guitar is typically E.
The tuning of the sixth string on a guitar is typically E.
The factors of the sound of a guitar string are tuning the string (changes the tension; the tighter the higher) and pressing down on the fret (changes amount of string that vibrates; the shorter the higher)
The standard tuning for the guitar 1st string is E.
The standard tuning for the 2nd string of a guitar is B.
The standard tuning for the guitar 6th string is E.
The standard tuning for the bottom string of a guitar is E.
The standard tuning for the guitar first string is E.
The standard tuning for the top string of a guitar is E.
The standard tuning for a 6-string guitar is EADGBE, from the lowest to the highest string.