
So, I would not get rid of a Strobostomp, which I'm really used to and whose display is more easily visible out doors and whose large pedalboard real estate is not a problem for me. And I'm about to go on a month long outdoor summer festival tour, which has me really apprehensive about the Turbo Tuner. I'll temper my previous comments with the fact that I don't sell much gear, and I've been using the Strobostomp for 8 years (and tuning brass instruments with physical Peterson strobe tuners for years before that) and am just a month into getting used to the Turbo Tuner, and I'm not at a loss for real estate on my pedal board. You'll never get either tuner to stay still either way, and they are both accurate enough that you can pretty much which direction of barely out of tune you want to be on all strings and get a well intonated guitar sounding about as in tune as a non tempered instrument can get. Both are super quick for tuning up, but the Turbo Tuner will actually register the notes while you're cleanly playing a moderately quick melody. Using both, I'll agree that the Turbo Tuner is a lot faster at tracking than the Strobostomp.

1 cents is 30 times more accurate than the TU-2 (+/- 3 cents accuracy). So, the Turbo Tuner is 20% more accurate than the Strobostomp, which at +/. Thanks!Īh, Heisenburg (I'm assuming you are Brian Cranston/Walter White) thanks for the correction.02 vs. I could have just missed the search term, though. Sorry for all the questions, but I can't recall seeing a comparison between the two. I could probably get an OK trade in on the Strobostomp, but if there is not much difference, I'll stick with it for a while.

I bought strictly to do set ups, as it is totally impractical for pedalboard use. I guess my question is whether the Strobostomp and the ST-200 are equally good in getting the guitar in tune, or is one better? Is the bypass as clean, since it would be in the chain of pedals? Finally, how does the big box Peterson stack up as a bench tool. Clearly the single ring strobe display on the ST-200 is easier to see, but the Strobostomp is bought and paid for. However, it looks like I've got the nucleus of a new band forming, and am starting to think about pedalboard structure. I've never used the latter out live since I bought them after my band fell apart. I have two of the Petersen strobe tuners - the very firsy big box one with the rubber cover, and the strobostomp.
