Interesting but no I have not done this officially. I tend to just run a a couple cents sharp as I go up the trebble side of the middle intervals and a couple flat as I adjust into the bass. At each octave I allow a drift, if you will. And at that I have not decided if this is how I want to continue. Do you tune for pure unisons ? I notice in some old tapes of Horowitz that his piano seems to be tuned slightly off pure but yet the harmony is very good. That could be the old recordings just as well.. I'd love to speak with his tuner if he is still around !
The 100n intervals are those that correspond to equal temperament, but what do the 84.2 +100n notes represent? Are you just comparing an equal temperament to another system?
Neat,I think I may be confusing equal temperament and just intonation, not exactly sure about all the minor variations. It’d be nice to find a chart that compares the differences through cents/ratios to better understand their relationships. Hfmadopter, did you tune your instrument with ‘drift’ so that the more local notes played together sound more perceptibly in tune? I heard that pure tuning or using exact equal spacing between steps and perfect unions tend to sound more dissonant without tweaking some of the intervals. It’s a subject I've been thinking about lately, actually, so I’m just wondering.
I've personally never experimented with this sort of thing before, but I'm aware of the existence of other tuning systems.I know of quarter tone compositions (24 notes), such as Wyschnegradsky etudes and others, and there are compositions that have been written specifically for 12TET equal temperament. However, I'm a little confused as to what you are doing here (which may be derivative of my ignorance of the subject). The 100n intervals are those that correspond to equal temperament, but what do the 84.2 +100n notes represent? Are you just comparing an equal temperament to another system?