[CAUT] Detuning phenomenon; was: How long to stabilize??

Ed Sutton ed440 at mindspring.com
Thu Feb 19 10:33:09 PST 2009


Darned if I know!

Lateral is what I'm imagining. 

It will depend on the hitch pin location. For the most part the change would probably be the same, front and back, since left sides of the trapezoids will tend to both face the same way relative to the bridge movement. This might account for the strings that are odd men out in the detuning pattern.


Do you think the string slips past the bridge pins on, say, a 6 cents pitch rise? I see this happenning in pianos which were not played during the humidity change, so I don't thing the strings were rendered past the bearing points.

Will it go back in tune if the humidity changes back. I don't know. Perhaps so if we are only talking about, say, a 2 cent pitch change.

I have no idea what kind of lateral pressures would be involved, or if the soundboard wood is capable of generating it.

For an even wilder thought, consider that if the bridge shrinks or expands enough, the angles of the bridge pins will change!

Probably more productive to think about changes in bridge cap thickness. Ron Nossaman may be able to send some statistics about his laminated bridge caps. He also lives in pitch adjustment hell, so may have more experience to share.

Ed
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jeff Tanner 
  To: Ed Sutton ; caut at ptg.org 
  Sent: Thursday, February 19, 2009 1:02 PM
  Subject: Re: [CAUT] Detuning phenomenon; was: How long to stabilize??


  You're referring to the shape created between the capo and the speaking length bridge pins, and you are speaking of a lateral shift rather than vertical, correct? If that was all that was involved, your theory makes sense.  But from the non speaking length pins to the hitch pins, wouldn't the reverse be created, somewhat cancelling it out?  The overall tension will eventually equal back out after a shift, right?  How would such changes in tension not also somehow affect the center string, it being also either shared by the left or right unison?

  Just thinking with you.
  Tanner
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Ed Sutton 
    To: caut at ptg.org 
    Sent: Thursday, February 19, 2009 12:40 PM
    Subject: Re: [CAUT] Detuning phenomenon; was: How long to stabilize??


    Would a small shift of the bridge to one side effect the left string more than the right, since the strings are not perpendicular to the line of the bridge pins? The outer strings create a long trapezoid, thus a shift of position would increase the tension on one and decrease it on the other.
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