As long as you know the notes of the strings (E, A, D, G, B, E) and you know how to find them on a piano, you could tune it by matching the tone of the piano notes to the tone of the strings on your guitar. You can also tune your guitar by ear by matching the tone of the strings to each other. The video below will tell you just how to do it.
Guitar without tuner is tuned (without quotes):.
First, you'll need something to match the pitch to. A low-tech option is an inexpensive tuning fork, which you can get at any music shop for a couple of dollars. To get even more accurate, you can invest in an electric tuner, but those aren't necessary for the average musician.
Or if you have another more stable instrument, like a piano, you can use that to obtain a base pitch. One final option is to use an online "tuning fork" (like this one: onlinetuningfork.com/ ) to obtain the correct pitch. Once you have a means of getting the correct pitch, you can tune one of your strings.
The lowest string is an E, followed, by A, D, G, B, and finally E again at the top. Even if you only tune one of the strings to an outside source, you can tune the others by putting your finger on the fifth fret of the tuned string and then matching the next string up to the sound it makes. That relationship holds true for all the strings except between the G and B strings - to tune the B string to the G string, you'd need to use the 4th fret on the G string.So for example, if you tune the A string to a tuning fork, you could cover the fifth fret on the A string, pluck the string, and the resulting note will be a D.
Like I said, any music store will have tuning forks for sale, or you can get them online at places like Amazon. amazon.com/s/?ie=UTF8&keywords=tuning+fo... If you're having trouble tuning your guitar, take it with you to a music store. The staff will be more than happy to show you how it's done.
I recently saw a guy tuning his guitar with an electronic guitar tuner. S may have been a bit older than the ones I found (see below) but I think you could probably find a variety of this at your local electronics store (BEST BUY) or your local music/ guitar shop. I'm sure the employees will be able to show you how to operate the gadget.
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