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When a tuning fork and a note are sounded together why do you loosen the string?

The purpose of a tuning fork is to know the exact pitch of a certain note, and then tune to that note. The string is probably loosened to match the pitch of the tuning fork.


How do you use tuning in a sentence?

This piano needs another tuning. I am tuning into my second-most favorite radio station now.


What beat frequency is produced by two tuning forks that vibrate simultaneously withe frequencies?

3.0 HZ


A 1056-Hz tuning fork is sounded at the same time a piano note is struck You hear three beats per second What is the frequency of the piano string?

Could be 259 Hz.Could be 267 Hz.


Beats are produced when two tuning forks one of frequency 240 Hz and the other of frequency 246 Hz are sounded together The frequency of the beats is?

6Hz


Beats can be heard when two tuning forks?

Almost the same frequency and are sounded together.


Two tuning forks are struck at the same timeone tuning fork has a frequency of 20 hz while the second tuning fork has a frequency of 226 hz how many beats will result?

11.3 beats


What is the frequency of the tuning fork sound?

The frequency of a tuning fork sound refers to the number of vibrations it makes per second. It is measured in Hertz (Hz).


What is the second string on a guitar and how is it tuned?

The second string on a guitar is the B string. It is tuned to the note B, which is the second highest pitch in standard tuning.


How much does a tuning fork vibrate a minute?

depends on fork


What frequency would you hear with a 340 Hz tuning fork near a guitar string vibrating at 350 Hz?

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.


What is the relationship between the number on the tuning fork and the pitch of the tuning fork?

In a simplistic way, pitches are nothing more than vibrations in the air. These vibrations happen at certain frequencies (the number of vibrations per second, measured in Hertz). The more vibrations per second the higher we perceive that pitch to be. A440 is now the tuning standard - that means that that A, in the middle of the treble staff, vibrates 440 times per second, or at 440 Hz. A note an octave higher would vibrate at 880 Hz and an octave lower vibrates at 220 Hz. Most tuning forks are pitched at A440, but you can get other notes (and even other temperaments). Those other notes vibrate at different frequencies, so the number on the tuning fork correspond to the numbers of vibrations-per-second that tuning fork makes.