[Harp-L] Re: Reed Profile - More questions
- To: Harp-L <harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [Harp-L] Re: Reed Profile - More questions
- From: Steve Baker <steve@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 18 Jun 2009 00:25:56 +0200
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Crazy Bob (and he must be fairly deranged to ask this kind of stuff)
wrote:
<From an industrial point of view, I find it hard to imagine that
two additional milling steps would be applied to individual reeds.
Given the tiny size of the individual reeds, I would think it would
be cost-prohibitive to manipulate each reed so that it could be
specifically milled.>
Indeed it would
<(1) Are specific reed profiles (mensurs?) milled in one pass?>
Reed brass strips are milled only once and then individual reeds of a
single mensur are chopped out of the strip. There is no further work
on the profile.
<(2) Are the weights (blobs) on the end of the lower pitched reeds
milled as part of the mensurs milling process?>
Yes
<(3) Regardless of the process, is specific response (the flexibility
of the reed, for lack of a better terminology) the reason for using a
weight at the free end of the lower-pitched reed, rather than a more
gradual taper (possibly requiring a much thinner reed)?>
No, it's a matter of getting a reed of a particular length to sound
with a certain pitch, otherwise one would indeed need thousands of
different sized reeds and it would be impossible to use only 2
mensurs for all keys.
<(4) Is manufacturing convenience the reason for milling across the
reed (laterally) instead of milling along the length of the reed
(longitudinally)? In my ignorance, I assume that might be one of the
reasons for earlier reed fatigue.>
You'd need an awfully large and accurate milling tool to cut a
significant number of reeds lengthways at one time. It's important to
sharpen the tools regularly to reduce surface roughness and thus
early reed fatigue.
<(5) Given that the milling process is applied to the upper side of
the strip of brass, I assume that the lower side of the brass is
completely flat. Is that so?>
Yes
Steve Baker
www.stevebaker.de
www.bluesculture.com
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