I don't think I could hear one just playing a few notes... do you think that you could pick an equally tempered 5th out from a pythagorean one on an instrument? I doubt it. Of course, when tuning, it still makes a difference; that's why we do it.nuffink wrote: let alone were able to identify one on an instrument.
Tuning to a stretched octave may be common, but as with any acoustic tuning, it creates problems. Tuning to a stretched octaves means that very high notes will sound out of tune with other properly ET instruments... according to wikipedia, from bottom to top it can come to +/- 35 cents, which certainly IS audible.
I am a bit surprised to read that tuning to a stretched octave is actually considered a correct approach to tuning (I really would have believed that the pianos I hear and work with didn't use it
Interesting side note, as respirator said, we DO hear the problems of ET. A favorite example of mine is also sprach Zarathustra (the theme from 2001: A space odyssey)... at the very end, you can hear the violin playing a "proper" major chord (with an acoustically tuned Major 3rd and perfect 5th) as it would naturally resonate; as the chord ends, an organ sustains the chord, and since the organ is ET you can hear the chord go flat.
