Re: [Harp-L] question about tuning a harp
"Incidentally, this convincingly demonstrates how unimportant the
mechanical
parts of the harp are to the sound. You can get a full, rich harmonica
tone
without any participation of the comb and covers. It denies any
effects
arising from the materials and/or minor differences in shape of the
comb and
covers. It does demonstrate the importance of player embouchure,
especially
at the low and high ends."
.....yes indeed Vern. And when you 'overblow/draw' direct to the
unattached plate, the sound is absolutely astounding!
RD
>>> "Vern Smith" <jevern@xxxxxxx> 17/08/2007 3:01 >>>
At the factory, they use a box connected to a centrifugal pump that has
an
opening slot for one reed. This sounds one reed continuously. If you
are
handy with tools, you can build such a device using a tank-type vacuum
cleaner, a 2KW light dimmer to make it run slower, quieter, and at 5
instead
of 80 inches of water (a measure of pressure). More details about the
one
that I built if you are interested.
A better solution is for you to learn to "kiss the reedplate".
1. Hold the reedplate...
...by the long edges ,
...with the reeds horizontal,
...with the reed-side of the plate toward you
...with your thumbs and index fingers in line with the ends of the reed
to
be sounded
...with your fingers NOT touching the reed.
2. Place the reed to your lips...
...to form an air seal around the reed
...with your lips close to but NOT touching the reed
...if you are careful with the valves, this can be done on chromatic
plates
3. Blow to sound the reed...even the draw reeds! *
...while watching your electronic tuner
...it is also possible to turn the plate over and draw but
...blow works best for me
* The reed doesn't know or care if you are blowing or drawing. All it
knows
is that there is a difference in pressure that causes air to flow
through
the slot.
4. Embouchures...
...Low / long reeds respond best to a minimum volume embouchure where
the
lips and tongue are as close to the reed as possible without touching
it.
....High / short reeds respond best to a high-volume embouchure, Hold
your
mouth/tongue as though you had a pear inside.
...Mid-range reeds respond to almost any embouchure.
...The above is non-intuitive. I cannot explain the reasons.
With just a little practice, you should be able to tune your harps
without
having to repeatedly reassemble them. If you discover that the
assembled
harp is a tiny bit sharper or flatter than the kissed reedplate, then
offset
the kissed tuning to compensate. I think that you will agree that this
technique is a great time-saver.
Incidentally, this convincingly demonstrates how unimportant the
mechanical
parts of the harp are to the sound. You can get a full, rich harmonica
tone
without any participation of the comb and covers. It denies any
effects
arising from the materials and/or minor differences in shape of the
comb and
covers. It does demonstrate the importance of player embouchure,
especially
at the low and high ends.
Vern
Visit my harmonica website www.Hands-Free-Chromatic.7p.com
----- Original Message -----
From: <yumpin_yimminie@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "harp list" <harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2007 8:52 AM
Subject: [Harp-L] question about tuning a harp
I've got some tuning that needs to get done. Have been curious about
how it
is done at a factory or at a customizer. When I go through this I end
up
assembling and disassembling a lot. I mean a whole lot. I mean so often
that
I try to ignore the out of tune-ness until it can't be ignored
anymore.
But surely at factories or customizers they don't actually assemble the
harmonicas and blow into them to find if they are in tune.
Would appreciate if someone(s) could fill me in on the how it is done
quickly.
Thanks much!
Have a Great Day,
Jim
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