Ukulele / Guitar Tuner๐ฑ
Tips for better detection:
- Play notes clearly and let them sustain
- Bring ukulele close to microphone
- Play one string at a time
- Ensure environment is reasonably quiet
- ๐ต Mobile-optimized - works best on phones!
--
-- Hz
Confidence: --%
Developer Features
Detected Frequency: -- Hz
Confidence: --%
Volume: --
Sample Rate: -- Hz
Detections: 0
Quality:
Algorithm: YIN
Range Check: --
Volume threshold
Needle smoothness
Perfect! String is in tune. ๐ถ
Lower if too sensitive, higher if not detecting
Higher = smoother needle movement
Debug Information
Detected Frequency: -- Hz
Confidence: --%
Volume: --
Sample Rate: -- Hz
Detections: 0
Quality:
Algorithm: YIN
Range Check: --
Tuning Information
Standard ukulele tuning (GCEA) is the most common tuning for soprano, concert, and tenor ukuleles.
Notes: G4, C4, E4, A4
Try different algorithms if detection is inconsistent
Disable if high strings aren't detecting properly
๐ต Mobile Optimized
This tuner works best on mobile devices. For desktop, ensure you're in a quiet environment.
This tuner works best on mobile devices. For desktop, ensure you're in a quiet environment.
Visual String Indicators
Explanation of Note Labels (G4, C4, etc.)
The number after the note name indicates the octave. Here's what it means:
- C4 = Middle C (261.63 Hz) - the C in the middle of a piano keyboard
- G4 = G above middle C (392.00 Hz)
- E4 = E above middle C (329.63 Hz)
- A4 = A above middle C (440.00 Hz) - this is the standard tuning pitch
Octave numbering system:
- C0 to B0: Lowest notes (sub-contra octave)
- C1 to B1: Very low notes
- C2 to B2: Low notes
- C3 to B3: Great octave
- C4 to B4: Small octave (where most ukulele notes are)
- C5 to B5: One-line octave
- C6 to B6: Two-line octave
- etc.
So in standard ukulele tuning:
- G4 = High G string (some tunings use G3 for low G)
- C4 = Middle C string
- E4 = E string
- A4 = A string