Organs drift with temperature. Transposing an organ digitally sounds artificial. Physical pipe tuning requires a tuner that can handle massive, complex overtones. The AT2's "Slow" response mode ignores the wind noise of a pipe and reads the fundamental root pitch accurately.
It utilizes Flat/Sharp LED indicators to provide clear visual feedback during tuning, a precursor to the digital needle displays common today. Unlike modern AAA-powered tuners, the korg at2
The Korg AT-2! That's a fascinating topic. Organs drift with temperature
This article dives deep into the history, technology, ergonomics, and practical application of the Korg AT2, explaining why, years after its release, it remains a gold standard for musicians who refuse to compromise. The AT2's "Slow" response mode ignores the wind
The distortion turned the humble tuning beep into a growling, industrial roar. Through the reverb, it sounded like a ghost trapped in a power grid. Jace started toggling the octave switch—low, medium, high—creating a rhythmic pulse that felt like a mechanical heartbeat.