It improves the temper of some scales, but not all. Bending becomes "interesting". In some cases you can bend the string and the note will go down. Personally I tend to tune the G slightly flat, and press a bit harder on some chord shapes/fret positions.TrueTemperment.com said:If you play a lot of jazz chords in keys which brass players favour ....
Is that the frets that Vai says he is going to put in all his guitars?
mmmm.... wouldn't my first finger have to be shaped like a lightning bolt to bar something ?
"True Temperament" frets might improve intonation and tuning, but they won't fix the problem. Perfect intonation is impossible to achieve on a guitar or any other fixed-pitch instrument. (It's theoretically possible on a guitar, but you'd need about 30 frets per octave to do it.)I have "relative pitch" and I hate it when the guitar is technically in tune, but I still hear these nuances with some chords that sound a bit off.
Action is set with bridge and nut height, the same as with any other nut. You can have whatever action you want.
Action is set with bridge and nut height, the same as with any other nut. You can have whatever action you want.