Yet many technicians still say, vehemently, that it doesn’t exist. In fact, I have measured this effect and have found:
A string’s pitch change by as much as 1.5 cents due to being tuned to another string in unison.
An interval’s beat speed change by as much as 13.7%, a drastic change in progressive beat speeds if we are trying to tune beat speeds of 5.9% for Equal Temperament.
So, there is no doubt in my mind that this occurs and is significant. In my opinion, the only possible valid, logical, and scientific responses a tuner can have to this information are:
1. “I will have to judge the final trichord before moving on if I want to be efficient and not have to retune drifted intervals” or,
2. “I do not need, wish, or care to tune to that accuracy”
A response of “This doesn’t exist” or “You are a liar”, is not appropriate considering the research that gone into this.
Here is a video showing intervals changing beat speed simply by adding and removing a mute. But of course, I could have altered the video and recordings. I encourage you to do the same experiments. But take a few samples. I have found that about 10% – 20% of the notes experience unison drift when tuned to other strings.