I'd hardly call 2 - 3 pounds including the cameracase I carry it in heavy.
-----Original Message-----
From: David Ilvedson [mailto:ilvey at sbcglobal.net]
Sent: Saturday, December 02, 2006 9:11 PM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: RCT or SAT III
Well, Avery, how's your arm strength? That is one heavy baby. I'd
stick with the SATIII...imho
David Ilvedson, RPT
Pacifica, CA 94044
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
Original message
From: Avery
To: "Cy Shuster" , "Pianotech List"
Received: 12/2/2006 10:35:53 AM
Subject: Re: RCT or SAT III
And since I'm planning on retiring from the university at the end of next
May, I'm even considering
buying a Verituner. The SAT I'm using right now, the university bought. It
still has the original
battery. But since I was an aural tuner for 25+ yrs., and I've read some
great things about the VT,
I'm definitely considering it. I don't have a laptop and don't really want
to lug one around.
Avery
At 08:10 AM 12/2/2006, you wrote:
It will even run on some cell phones! Check it out!
--Cy--
----- Original Message -----
From: Avery
To: tune4u at earthlink.net ; Pianotech List
Sent: Friday, December 01, 2006 1:53 PM
Subject: RE: RCT or SAT III
At 01:24 PM 12/1/2006, you wrote:
Step-by-step instructions:
1. Go to http://www.tunelab-world.com/ and download TuneLab Pocket.
2. Install it.
3. Try it, if you must, for free.
4. Fall in love with it, with it's spectrum analyzer, split-scale
option, astonishingly accurate one-pass pitch corrections, etc.
5. Buy it.
6. Congratulate yourself on solving your problem instantly with a
truly great product and only spending $340.
IF you already have a laptop!
Avery
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