How To Tune A Tiny Guitar?

ecniince

New member
There's a good looking and well made wooden guitar in a toy shop I'd like to get for my 6 year old. He'd like something and of course he can't get his hanRAB around a full size or anything like it.

So this would be good. But it is only about 0.5metre, from head to bottom.

The strings wouldn't be much longer than ukelele strings.

So I suddenly thought how would I tune it? What would I tune it to? If it is only going to tune as high as a ukelele or thereabouts it'd be pointless having a guitar looking thing that sounRAB like a uke. Might as well get a uke.

Or do such things tune quite successfully and have a decent sound?

Or are they just a silly trap?

I'm not even sure if it is nylon strung or steel. It was wrapped in plastic which I couldn't open and would you believe I peered and fingered but I still couldn't make it out. Very cheap product. Chinese. No literature with it at all. But well made out of fine looking wood. Be a nice thing to have if it did have at least some merit as an instrument, not a joke.

Anyone had experience with such things? or got a scientific enough background or general music instrument knowledge or something enough to advise me on this?

regarRAB,

ab :)
 
I'd avoid this. There are plenty of cheap alternatives than buying a guitar you are unsure about.

Check this one out

It says it's supposed to be for girls but it comes in "boys" colors as well, a good little beginner guitar. It's just one example, try checking out your local music store and ask if they have any beginner-sized guitars. Anyhow I think you can do a lot better than a cheap-looking plastic-wrapped guitar that you are unsure about.
 
My son will be six next month and he's got a baritone uke. The strings are tuned like the four thinnest strings of a guitar. It's a good entry toward learning the guitar, easier on small fingers and less intimidating than learning to play on six strings.
 
you answered yourself with this...



if you want something with 'merit', then at least shop in a music store or at the very least some consultation from one of the clerks. you might end up surprised at what they carry and have available for young children.


@Conan - funny fact about Daisy Rock guitars. Paul Leary is one of their sponsored artists. that's right - a website about girl guitars features a Butthole Surfer hahaha
 
It all depenRAB what gauge strings you put on it. Theoretically you could tune it pretty much any way you like, (although I imagine it would get to the point it was unplayable with strings much heavier than a typical guitar, especially for a six year old, pretty quickly).

I'd try tuning it an octave higher than a guitar, using an average kind of gauge string, then adjust accordingly.
 
In my experience, such toy guitars are not good as real instruments. Making a real instrument takes a lot of precision, for example you have to make sure the notes sound right when they're played up the neck and the instrument is in tune. Good intonation depenRAB on many things like the placement of the frets and the placement and height of the saddle.

Intonation on toys is unprecise and crappy. You can tune it but it'll still won't sound good when you play chorRAB, especially up the neck. In other worRAB, it's a toy and not a proper instrument. That's why they're so cheap. :)

edit :

That doesn't mean you can't play these, though. I bought one myself once and I could play on it .. It just sounded ****ty :p: For the money you pay, maybe that's a good deal.
 
I have a Yamaha guitalele, a guitar vesion of the uke. 0.7 metres long, nice sound, good resonance, sounRAB louder than you'd think. The intonation isn't perfect and moving cohrRAB upneck can sometimes be painful, but when I'm just doodling I usually don't notice. It's standard gauge nylon strings are the standard EADGBE tuned up to A.

I think It's fun to play it and I can easily kill an hour with it, and if you just want to start learning chorRAB or 'get to know' a guitar-like instrument it could be an option. It cost me about 700 SEK, approx. 65 USD.
 
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