Comments

Hotrodding

Hotrodding

Admission first, I have to concede to myself that I have been a complete jeezly snob for 30 plus years. I turned up my nose at tin whistles. Yesterday I bought a Clarke D whistle to help me memorize tunes and play in the car. Oh yea, after reading the posts on playing and driving I had a run at it with the transverse flute. Fine at the reds but sucks otherwise.
Anyways, that little whistle is sooo beautiful. I wish I would have had one of those when I was growing up on the prairies. They are remarkable.

But my submission is, does anyone hotrod their flutes? In my first post I spoke of the flute maker who overhauls flutes. He rounds off the bottom inside of the toneholes to decrease turbulence just like I would grind intake ports on an engine.
My Haynes and most good flutes have tone holes that meet the main tube inside at sharp right angles. This was a sign of good craftmanship but not necessarily good science. This guy maintains that rounding of those corners leads to better sounding flutes. The M&E has drilled and thus sharp inside meeting angles. I am tempted to round those corners off.

Thoughts?

# Posted on November 21st 2003 by ppitussi

Re: Hotrodding

Maybe that turbulence is what give the wooden flute it's unique sound. Round off those edges and you might find it starts to approach the sine-wave smoothness of the metal flute...?

# Posted on November 22nd 2003 by Ottery

Re: Hotrodding

I make bamboo flutes, and a lot of times I do round the insides of the holes.I think it does improve the sound a little bit.It will also sharpen the note a little.If your M&E is in tune with itself,and sounds ok,I don't think it's worth it to risk the tuning.
I have a silver flute too, and it's holes have sort of sharp angles on the inside,I think.Also, I can change the way it sounds by the way I play it.It can sound almost like a wooden flute,or all smooth and classical,depending on what I'm playing.
-Kelly

# Posted on November 22nd 2003 by seisflutes

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