The guitar is an imperfect instrument. The string thickness, the fret weight, the height of the action & the Relief in the neck all have some affect on how well or bad it will play all over the neck. So the concept of intonation is to make it "less" out of tune in all areas of the neck. For example: IF you tune the guitar perfectly to an open E chord, then play a double bar chord the 7th fret and check it with a tuner, you may find that a few of the strings are slightly sharp or flat, but most people can't hear it so for the most part its good.... there are those rare individuals who can her these minuscule differences and thats where the concept of fan fret guitars come from. The logic of a fan fret instrument is everywhere on the neck the guitar is in perfect tune..... I just wonder on how that will affect going to a lighter or heavier string gauge
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If it was simply that, there would be a consistent pattern and there would be references for saddle placements like there are for string actions.
I think you maybe aluding to the meaning of 'intonation' from a theory perspective... Because overtones are not perfect ratios, western music has adjusted the tuning of fudamentals so that ratios between notes stay the same when we shift keys.I heard something the other week about if all notes were perfectly in tune it would mess with your ears creating the illusion that it was out of tune. I think this has more go do with equal vs just tempered tuning, but i'd be interested to hear if anyone knows more about it.
If you wanna talk about guitars naturally being out of tune, look at the saxophone, there are three different ways to play the same note and two of them are wildy out of tune. I forget what note it is, but again I find it interesting.
Equal temperament is most common, but other systems (Just Intonation is a good example), can provide much better tuning within a key, but you would need to retune whenever you change keys.
any major examples of songs featuring Just intonation?
Again a bit of a tangent, but do you know of any major examples of songs featuring Just intonation? I've heard it in isolation, but I've always wondered if different intonations would be able to be heard in a mix.
So now we need to invent the Fret Adjustment Intonation Guitar with mechanized rubber frets and stretchy neck material. When you move the saddle, the entire scale length and all of its active components move. That section of the neck will stretch or shrink, and the fret will move and bend under that string, creating a smooth transition to the next string.