







🎸 Tune like a pro, wherever you go!
The Fender "Bullet" Chromatic Clip-On Tuner is a compact, lightweight tuner designed for guitar and bass players. Featuring a noise-proof vibration sensor and a vibrant LED color screen, it delivers precise tuning in any environment. Its secure clamp and sleek black design combine style with reliable performance, all backed by Fender's trusted quality.





| Product Dimensions | 2.54 x 15.24 x 15.24 cm; 20 g |
| Batteries | 2 LR44 batteries required. (included) |
| Item model number | 239979002 |
| Body Material | plastic |
| Colour | Black |
| Connector | clamp |
| Material Type | Plastic |
| Size | 0 |
| Battery Type | Lithium Ion |
| Item Weight | 20 g |
R**N
Excellent add-on for the guitarist
I don't really understand the negative reviews for this tuner, it's so easy to use that it's rather irrelevant that the display might not be perfectly aligned. It might not suit the 'professional' guitar player, but is an excellent piece of kit for a beginner or a strummer such as myself.I'm just about to buy my 4th one. I bought one each for my sons who are just learning to play, and one of them lost his so that had to be replaced. I had been using an iPad app for my own guitar, but have since found this so compact and easy to use that I've been borrowing it from one of the boys to tune my guitar. I've therefore decided to buy my own, since the price makes it a very small investment, and while the iPad app is very comprehensive, the Fender tuner is wonderfully mobile.In use, you simply clip it to your guitar head and strum the E string. It picks up which string you're playing and the meter shows if it's in tune or not and you adjust the string until the meter is showing the centre point. You can then move to the next string and the next ... If you need to retune a previous string (for example if you accidentally turn the wrong tuning peg as I sometimes do) this tuner 'knows' which string you're tuning and automatically switches to it. Once you get used to using it I have found that once a string is in tune, stop it vibrating (just touch the string) to ensure it will quickly pick up the next string. Otherwise there is a slight delay while it figures out which string it's supposed to be monitoring.The only thing to be careful of is that the on/off button also controls which instrument you're tuning, so if you're not careful you could end up tuning your guitar as a ukelele.It does have a few 'key specific' tunings for the more advanced guitarist, and note that I've written this as a guitarist so cannot comment on its use for ukelele, violin etc.
I**D
Great little tuner
I clip this to my bottom E tuning peg (on both my strat and Taylor acoustic) so it doesnt damage the guitars wood and it works wonderfully from there.Its only needed for a few moments to bring all the strings to super close to correct pitch, so the battery is hardly ever used.Tiny adjustments by ear after that make perfect. I've not once been disappointed.It was taking me a lot longer to tune my guitar with an E tuning fork before this, and those odd times I struggled to get it right are gone.An ideal tuner, so small and simple. Very quick to indicate correct tuning.Just dont lose it, its not easy to find!
D**S
Solid Tuner
This is a comparison between the 'Fender FT-004' & the 'Korg AW 2'.Initially after some research ..testing a borrowed clip-on tuner & reading reviews - I was wanting a neat, non-wacky, 'pro', accurate unit. I settled on the Korg AW 2. After a year I thought I'd buy another for my second guitar, so got the Fender FT-004. They both tune through vibration - the best method in my opinion; the Korg can be switched from 'Mic' to 'Piezo' (use Piezo), the Fender is 'vibration' only. I'm using classical guitars, though have on occasion used the Korg just as well on a steel-string guitar.Comparing side by side on the same guitar, both are neat and professional looking.First off in differences ..the clip: the Korg's double ball-joint is always un-popping itself, a nuisance, we all lean our guitars on a wall, or put the tuner in a carry box, etc, ..it keeps dislocating itself from the clip, no big deal but it will happen and its annoying. The Fender has a simple hinge & rotating plate mount - it can't un-pop, you lose one angle of rotation but I prefer its solidity.Back light, the Korg has an 'on' or 'off' button, the Fender is always 'on' - maybe this means less battery life but always on is fine by me (also the colour changes with the Fender).* The main and most important difference is in the method of tuning. The Korg uses a very fast sample period (maybe <1/10 sec) resulting in a very precise and lively reading, the detailed digital gauge is also very wide in its throw (the unit is wide compared to the vertical design of the Fender) this results in a more 'nervous' style of tuning - harmonics produced by the guitar's body and the plucked string settling into its frequency causes the needle to fluctuate - yet accurately picking up those stray frequencies. The Fender seems to have a slower sample period (~0.5sec) ironing-out fluctuations, this averaging does make it marginally less accurate, + the digital gauge doesn't have the detailed analogue realism offered by the Korg, and the Fender settles on the 'correct tuning' more readily while the Korg says slightly up or down.Over the course of a day, in different temperatures, guitars change tuning subtly, using the Korg you might be endlessly tweaking - its a technical tuner, the Fender is more confident in saying 'yes' & is more solid - it tunes like a trained ear 'that's it, now play!'My verdict is both are great, the Korg has the edge in terms of detailed accuracy, the articulated joint is a sore point though - too delicate; the Fender has a nice solid confidence about it, and in this I prefer it as my ready dependable tuner.Their differences may swing it one way or another for you ..if you play the lute get the Korg, if you play live-gigs with a steel-string get the Fender, if you play classical guitar you might end up getting both!
P**D
Top product, easy to read and use
Bought this to replace a Snark, which developed a fault. Although it is really small it is as easy to read as the Snark and is accurate enough. Of course, it's never going to be as accurate as an expensive digital pedal tuner but for the cost is certainly very good. I just keep it on my acoustic (have used it for electric too) as it is so small and light. I also use a Boss TU3 chromatic pedal tuner which is also brilliant.
D**B
Defective.... disappointed
The media could not be loaded. I got to tune my guitar 1 time, and since then its been broken. Tuner doesn't seem to pick up anything any more. It worked perfectly, but only once through 6 strings.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 month ago