Re: [Harp-L] Reed Material from Micro-Mark
Most reeds are cut from stock about .012" thick. This will
be the thickness of the square bases and the slugs at the
tip of the low pitched reeds. You can buy shim stock from
McMaster Carr if you wish to make reeds.
Unfortunately, reeds are not the same thickness from root to
tip. They have a non-linear taper called a thickness
profile. I doubt that you can make satisfactory reeds from
.006" or .008" flat stock. The low-pitched reeds can be
.010" thick near the root. The high-pitched reeds can be
.002" thick near the tip. None of them is the same
thickness from root to tip.
To make satisfactory reeds, you must:
1. Know what the profile should be. You can get an idea by
using a micrometer at several places along the length of a
commercial reed. I made a little fixture that uses a dial
indicator feeling the reed on a little track on which it can
slide.
2. Cut the profile into the stock. This is much more
difficult and usually requires a special machine.
3. Understand that the design of a reed involves more than
pitch, You can make a reed of the correct pitch whose
stiffness is too little or too great making it unresponsive
to normal blowing/drawing pressure. It can be the correct
pitch and stiffness but have too much stress at one place,
The pitch of a reed is very sensitive to changes of
thickness near the root where most of the bending tends to
occur. You can verify this by removing a tiny bit of
material in this area and observing the amount the pitch
decreases. Using stock that is a couple of mils too thick
or thin can really start you out in "left field."
design-wise.
One purpose of the taper is to spread the stress more evenly
along the length of the reed. A flat reed will have a huge
amount of stress near the rivet and fail there quickly.
Most reed designs make the root a bit thicker/stronger to
reduce the stress there.
Making reeds is an interesting challenge, there is much more
to it than cutting a piece flat stock to the outline of a
reed and installing it in your harp.
Good luck. Let us know how you fare.
Vern
----- Original Message -----
From: "Harvey Berman" <cscharp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2009 12:20 PM
Subject: [Harp-L] Reed Material from Micro-Mark
Micro-Mark lists .006" sheets of Phosphor Bronze, which
comes in a pack of 3 5X7 sheets. The price is $11.55. With
the exception of the weight and the pad, this is pretty
close to what most reeds should be, so I ordered a pack to
experiment with. When the pack came, it was actually .008",
which is too thick.
I talked to Mico Mark, and they called the manufacturer, who
told them that the .006" is not going to be available, so
they shipped them .008 So, if anyone is considering ordering
this product, Part number 83100, be advised that it is
really .008".
I decided to cut out a reed, and I started sanding the
thickness, and blowing the reed. When I got to almost .006,
I got a pretty good sounding reed. It took a long time with
my sanding wand, but it worked, and left me with a pad that
is .008".
If anyone can recommend a quick method of cutting .008"
Phosphor Bronze, and also for taking off .002" in thickness,
without a huge investment in metalworking tools, I would
appreciate it.
Harvey Berman
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