Kite-valved Brass Instruments: Difference between revisions

TallKite (talk | contribs)
mNo edit summary
TallKite (talk | contribs)
Added a column to the first table showing cents error when valves are used in combination. Added a paragraph about a way to correct the errors. Made the 2nd (huge) table collapsible.
Line 5: Line 5:
The individual harmonics in the harmonic series are analogous to the strings of a Kite guitar. The instrument proposed here would have especially long tubing, so that the harmonics 3-9 are easily played, and harmonics 1 and 2 are not and would be unused. The reasoning is that the interval between two harmonics should be an odd number of edosteps, which 3/2 is not. This is so that the harmonic will fill in the gaps of the lower harmonic. Also, each harmonic needs to be at most 16 frets (32 edosteps) from the harmonic two above it, since that is the range of the valves. Thus the ratio must be at most 12/7 = 32\41. Harmonics 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 9 meet these requirements. The 8th harmonic is like an extra string that overlaps the 7th harmonic's notes and provides an alternate path to certain notes. Harmonics 10 and 11 overlap the 9th harmonic, so 9 is a good stopping point.
The individual harmonics in the harmonic series are analogous to the strings of a Kite guitar. The instrument proposed here would have especially long tubing, so that the harmonics 3-9 are easily played, and harmonics 1 and 2 are not and would be unused. The reasoning is that the interval between two harmonics should be an odd number of edosteps, which 3/2 is not. This is so that the harmonic will fill in the gaps of the lower harmonic. Also, each harmonic needs to be at most 16 frets (32 edosteps) from the harmonic two above it, since that is the range of the valves. Thus the ratio must be at most 12/7 = 32\41. Harmonics 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 9 meet these requirements. The 8th harmonic is like an extra string that overlaps the 7th harmonic's notes and provides an alternate path to certain notes. Harmonics 10 and 11 overlap the 9th harmonic, so 9 is a good stopping point.


The fingering chart below assumes the valves run in order with 1st = 1 fret, 2nd = 2 frets, 3rd = 4 frets and 4th = 8 frets. = open, = closed. It also assumes the lowest note of the instrument is F (with all valves closed, and playing the 1st harmonic). Notes that are duplicated by a higher harmonic are in parentheses.  
The fingering chart below assumes the valves run in order with 1st = 1 fret, 2nd = 2 frets, 3rd = 4 frets and 4th = 8 frets. = open/depressed, = closed/released. It also assumes the lowest note of the instrument is F (with all valves open, and playing the 1st harmonic). Notes that are duplicated by a higher harmonic are in parentheses. The final column shows the sharpness caused by intervals not adding up precisely.  
{| class="wikitable center-all"
{| class="wikitable center-all"
|+
|+
Line 11: Line 11:
! rowspan="2" |valves
! rowspan="2" |valves
! colspan="7" |harmonics
! colspan="7" |harmonics
! rowspan="2" |error
|-
|-
!3
!3
Line 29: Line 30:
|F
|F
|G
|G
|0.0¢
|-
|-
!1
!1
Line 39: Line 41:
|^^F/vGb
|^^F/vGb
|^^G/vAb
|^^G/vAb
|0.0¢
|-
|-
!2
!2
Line 49: Line 52:
|F#/^Gb
|F#/^Gb
|G#/^Ab
|G#/^Ab
|0.0¢
|-
|-
!3
!3
Line 59: Line 63:
|vG
|vG
|vA
|vA
|3.8¢
|-
|-
!4
!4
Line 69: Line 74:
|^G
|^G
|^A
|^A
|0.0¢
|-
|-
!5
!5
Line 79: Line 85:
|vG#/Ab
|vG#/Ab
|vA#/Bb
|vA#/Bb
|7.3¢
|-
|-
!6
!6
Line 89: Line 96:
|^G#/vvA
|^G#/vvA
|^A#/vvB
|^A#/vvB
|14.4¢
|-
|-
!7
!7
Line 99: Line 107:
|A
|A
|B
|B
|24.6¢
|-
|-
!8
!8
Line 109: Line 118:
|^^A/vBb
|^^A/vBb
|vC
|vC
|0.0¢
|-
|-
!9
!9
Line 119: Line 129:
|A#/^Bb
|A#/^Bb
|^C
|^C
|13.7¢
|-
|-
!10
!10
Line 129: Line 140:
|vB
|vB
|vC#/Db
|vC#/Db
|27.0¢
|-
|-
!11
!11
Line 139: Line 151:
|^B
|^B
|^C#/vvD
|^C#/vvD
|43.0¢
|-
|-
!12
!12
Line 149: Line 162:
|C
|C
|D
|D
|52.7¢
|-
|-
!13
!13
Line 159: Line 173:
|^^C
|^^C
|^^D/vEb
|^^D/vEb
|70.8¢
|-
|-
!14
!14
Line 169: Line 184:
|C#/^Db
|C#/^Db
|D#/^Eb
|D#/^Eb
|88.5¢
|-
|-
!15
!15
Line 179: Line 195:
|vD
|vD
|vE
|vE
|108.4¢
|}
|}
One way to correct the cents errors might be to have a 5th valve, a trombone-style one, that moves a tiny amount depending on which of the other 4 valves are open. It could be done with a microchip, 4 sensors and a very accurate stepper motor. It would run off a battery, or perhaps solar power.
The next chart shows each harmonic's 16 notes plotted against the full 41edo gamut of notes. There is over 2 octaves total range. Note the 7 missing notes in the lowest part of the range, and the 3 missing notes in the highest part. The next two harmonics, 10 and 11, merely extend the pitches of harmonic 9 without supplying any missing notes.
The next chart shows each harmonic's 16 notes plotted against the full 41edo gamut of notes. There is over 2 octaves total range. Note the 7 missing notes in the lowest part of the range, and the 3 missing notes in the highest part. The next two harmonics, 10 and 11, merely extend the pitches of harmonic 9 without supplying any missing notes.
{| class="wikitable center-all"
{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed center-all"
|+
|+
Full 2 octave range (low note C)
! rowspan="2" |41-edo
! rowspan="2" |41-edo
gamut
gamut
Line 240: Line 260:
|
|
|-
|-
!
!  
|
|
|
|
Line 249: Line 269:
|
|
|-
|-
!
!  
|vD
|vD
|
|
Line 1,041: Line 1,061:
|D#/^Eb
|D#/^Eb
|-
|-
!
!  
|
|  
|
|
|
|
Line 1,059: Line 1,079:
|vE
|vE
|}
|}


[[Category:Kite Guitar]]
[[Category:Kite Guitar]]
[[Category:41edo]]
[[Category:41edo]]