🎼 Tune into Excellence with Every Beat!
The Wittner Wooden Metronome 811M features a stunning mahogany finish and an audible bell, designed in Germany for musicians seeking precision and style. Perfect for enhancing your practice sessions.
C**E
It works Great !
The metronome worked as expected. Nice sound, well built, loudness is good, bell is loud enough, but can get irritating if you're concentrating on something else other than using the bell as a marker, so I shut it off most of the time. Plus, the pendulum is nice to watch it's mechanical movement, seems to give me a visual help in accenting off beat rhythms. I can't stand digital metronomes so this takes care of that. I don't care about super small variances in time compared to a digital device, as some do. If this varies a bit, don't care, "haven't checked" but it's mechanical, and more like playing with others in the real world. It just works nice. I like it's grandfather clock-like sound and mechanical movement.
O**A
Helps keep time and is loud
Made of real wood I got the walnut just looks prettier. Helps with keeping time and can here over a violin has a bell for 2,4,6,8 beet per measure you can use or not just a little on the side
A**R
Excellent quality, im very impressed!
Great metronome. Its accurate and works as well as it looks. I love the bell function, i didnt understand what it is or what it does (The bell function) but after trying it its a great added feature.
W**Z
Great, but...
Just got mine. I was excited to finally get a quality metronome, but then…Where should I start?Let’s go thru the description first. As seen on other posts, this is a mechanical (pendulum) metronome from a very reputable company. This particular model is one of their wooden cased 800/810 series metronomes. All their internal mechanisms are the same. As some have described, some internal parts, particularly cog wheels and regulators, are plastic, which could be seen as cheap, but may also allow for smooth movement (or simply to cut on the cost). The base where the mechanism attaches to the case, as well as the front panel holding the scale, the base / bottom cover including the feet, and the latch on the cover are all plastic - bottom line, don’t be surprised to see plastic. (As a off note, it has three feet. For some reason I was expecting four feet to match the shape.) The case is solid wood, but pay attention before ordering your model. As someone already pointed out, model letters do matter. All of these wooden models are made of solid wood, but they are stained (“coloured” as Wittner describes them) to the color depicted. Only the 804/804m and 814/814m models have cases made out of genuine walnut wood - the rest are stained wood, not laminate. Overall, it looks very nice and I would argue solid as well.The mechanism runs smoothly and the tic-tic sound is crisp. It is also well regulated, able to keep a steady tempo for a long time, and only noticeably slower during the last beats of the winding - I believe this is where it is best. The pendulum also adds the benefit of providing a visual aid.However, I was much disappointed to find out that the calibration is off, resulting in what others describe as “getting off beat” rather quickly when compared to other tried and true quartz metronomes. Being and engineer I am at times almost obsessed with precision, so I went on to do some tests to find out the reason for this anomaly. I went on to measure the BPMs with a stopwatch and found that by 1’23’’ the mechanical metronome running at 60 bpm was ahead by one full beat. The same was true running at 120 bpm, and other measures. Basically, the pendulum mechanism was running fast when tested at sea level. Thinking that the way to slow it down was to add weight to the slide, I proceeded to test doing so. I got good results by affixing a piece of masking tape the size of the slide onto the sliding weight for the 60 bpm measure. But then for 120 bpm I had to add three pieces of masking tape, indicating that the calibration was non-linear (which is obviously marked on the scale). So, adding weight was not going to be a practical solution (the idea was to eventually permanently affix lead tape). So, if weight cannot be added, then the scale must be changed. This would be impossible since the scale is affixed to the front panel and the marks on the pendulum are permanent. Then the only other viable solution to slowing the tempo was to slide the sliding weight slightly upward from its mark. After some tests I found that sliding the slide half a notch between 60 and 58 bpm achieves a very close-to 60 bmp measure. The same between the 120 and 116 bpm marks achieves a close-to and steady 120 bpm. I did not try the rest, but I would bet it would be close. It works, but it is rather cumbersome.It was quite disappointing to find out that such an expensive tool from a reputable manufacturer was so imprecise, particularly if it indeed can be solved by just adjusting the scale. It is possible this mechanism was designed and calibrated for higher altitudes (so the pendulum would be slower), but I doubt it - it would be a bit of a stretch. I am consoled only by two facts, 1) that I am not so much in need of precise tempo for my practice, but rather steady tempo - this the mechanical metronome does well, and 2) it does look great on top of my piano.So, if you are looking for a precise metronome, look elsewhere or you will be very disappointed. For the same price you can get a top-of-the-line precise quartz / electronic metronome like a Boss DB-90. If on the other hand you are not much concerned about precise tempo but rather steady tempo (e.g. you practice on your own), are looking for a nice display piece or are nostalgic / fascinated by mechanical metronomes, then the Wittner 800/810 wooden case metronome series are the ones to have. For these reasons I am keeping mine.
D**Y
Bitterly disappointed: plastic internals and it stopped working in six days
The media could not be loaded. When Santa brings an expensive metronome to your kid, you expect it to last a very long time. This lasted six days. The bell feature stops the metronome motion though it still works as a normal metronome when the bell is turned off. I looked through the plastic grate on the bottom to see plastic internals in the mechanism. No surprise it broke, and not a recipe for it to work for a lifetime as was the expectation for the high price paid. I'm also disappointed by the quality of the wood though that is not a deal-breaker.
A**R
Very nice metronome
This is a nicely crafted metronome. I'm not sure it's worth the price, but it was a gift. It keeps time accurately and the wooden case has been crafted nicely.
M**A
the best brand
our piano teacher said this is one of the oldest and most famous brand making metronome. It's expensive. much stable than our previous cheaper ones. Just need to ask our kid to be careful not to drop or bump it.
J**Z
Pure Joy!
This is what you need to help you keep time. A large visible pendulum with a distinct click with a bell every 2nd, 3rd, 4th, or 6th click, the choice is yours. Having a visual reference for the beat is estremely helpful in helping you to lock on. the bell helps to make sure you you get back to the one, or whichever beat you want to synch on. A swinging pendulum keeps time about as consistently as anything. You may not be able to slide the weight precisely to 128.98 bpm, but is that realy so important? You get a nice pleasing audible click and a bell if you desire. No batteries needed, and a full winding will last a very, very long time. i wouldn't know, I only wind it about 5 or 6 turns. I use this for guitar, and it really helps me to lock on. Out of the corner of my eye I can actually see where I am with respect to time as the next beat is approaching. No eye-straining LCDs to read and no array of buttons to select. You start and stop it by giving the pendulum a push or by blocking it respectively.
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