Various percussion instruments (marimbas, xylophones, and vibraphones) have a series of sound bars or keys that a player strikes with a mallet to obtain a desired musical melody or the notes of a composition. A marimba is a keyboard percussion instrument with a resonator tube below each key to enhance the sounds. The lengths of the resonator tubes adjacent the longer or lower-pitched keys must be correspondingly longer for in order to match the lower pitches of their respective adjacent keys. However if a marimba's keys are mounted at a playable height, say 75 cm (about 30 in), the longest or lowest-pitch resonator tubes must be very long—too long to clear the floor. This problem has been overcome by various techniques. One technique is to bend the bottom portions of the lowest-pitch tubes upwardly using U-shaped bends to keep keeping them away from the floor. Another technique is to extend the bottoms of the longer tubes into large box-shaped bottoms, thereby to increase their effective length by approximating a Helmholtz resonator. (The Helmholtz resonator is discussed infra.) A third technique is to mount a shorter, narrower auxiliary virtual-extender tube (VET) on the wall inside the main tube, near the top.
The following is a list of some prior art that illustrates these techniques for effectively extending the lengths of the longer resonator tubes:
Haskell shows a bass or effective length or virtual extender tube (VET) A mounted inside a main organ tube B. Tube B has an adjustable tuning stopper E at its top and tube A is suspended from stopper E by two threaded rods F (Haskell,
In his patents, Deagan shows telescoping, interior resonating tubes or VETs for pianos and marimbas. His inner resonating tubes are adjustably secured within the main tubes by clamping screws ('112 patent) and clamping bars ('785 and '281 patents). In his '112 patent, Deagan's VET is partially conical and terminates in a thin diaphragm adjacent the vibrating body, i.e., tone bar, of the instrument. In his '785 and '281 patents, his interior resonating tube is partially conical and terminates in a thin diaphragm at the end of the tube opposite the vibrating body.
Haskell and Deagan's VETs are situated within the main resonating tube. Excitation of the air in the column is initiated at the entrance to the external tube.
Willis shows organ pipes with various tuning tubes that are slidably suspended from the sides of the main tubes by webs between the two tubes. Once the tubes are in the desired position, the webs can be secured to the pipes by solder.
Stevens shows a resonating tube for a percussion instrument. A tubular resonator is bent or formed into a smooth L-shaped, J-shaped, or U-shaped curve that is either open or stopped on one end.
Another tubular resonator is ascribed to physicist and physiologist Hermann von Helmholtz. In 1863, Helmholtz published a book, “On the Sensations of Tone as a Physiological Basis for the Theory of Music”. He describes a resonator, well known and understood today, that comprises an external necked region that is coupled on one end to a resonant cavity and on the other end to open air. Blowing across the neck of the resonator, or otherwise driving air into the resonator and then allowing the air to escape produces a tone whose fundamental frequency is given by the well-known Helmholtz equation fH=(v/2π)(A/VoL)1/2, where fH is the Helmholtz frequency, v is the speed of sound in air, A is the cross-sectional area of the neck, Vo is the volume of the cavity, and L is the length of the neck. An example is the tone generated by blowing across the neck of a soft drink bottle.
While all of the prior-art resonators are adaptable to percussion instruments, we found that they have one or more sound-quality drawbacks, including a weak fundamental frequency and distortion of the sounds created by the keys and their respective tubes.
We have discovered an improved resonator for percussion instruments such as marimbas. Our resonator comprises an exterior resonating tube which surrounds an open interior tube (VET) that extends downwardly from the top of the exterior tube into the exterior tube, thus forming a resonant chamber that is neither an organ pipe, nor an organ pipe with an extender tube, nor a true Helmholtz resonator. As such, our resonator enables a percussion instrument to produce pleasant tonal qualities heretofore largely unheard. The opening in our resonating tube is mounted adjacent the vibrating tone bar or key of the percussion instrument. Tuning of the combination is accomplished by moving a stop at the lower end of the exterior tube and adjusting the area and length of the opening in the interior tube.
Description
When key 800 is arranged to produce a note at the lower end of the scale, tube 100 must be relatively long—too long to clear the floor (not shown) below. In order to lower the resonant frequency of tube 100 so that it matches the tone of key 800 above, it has been curved upward, provided with a resonating box at its lower end, or provided with a smaller VET (virtual extender tube) on the wall and inside the main tube, near the top, as discussed above. However these techniques have certain sound quality drawbacks, including a weak fundamental frequency and distortion of the sounds created by the keys and their respective tubes.
These problems are reduced by providing an inner, virtual extender tube (VET) 115 with an upper opening 120 and a lower opening 125. VET 115 is mounted in a hole in plug 110 and extends downward into tube 100. VET 115 preferably is generally cylindrical in shape.
The shape, position, and size of tube 100, plug 110, stop 105, VET 115, and the materials of which they are made all influence the characteristics of sound produced by this embodiment. These physical properties can be altered by the manufacturer to enhance various aspects of sound produced by the resonator, including its resonant frequency.
For example outer tube 100 can have, in cross section, a circular shape 100′, as shown in
Bottom plugs 110′ to 110′″ should have shapes that conform to those of tubes 100′-100′″, respectively, as shown in
VET 115 can also have various shapes and positions. It is circular and centered in
Unlike the true Helmholtz resonator, supra, our arrangement includes a predetermined volume of air 116 (
VET 100, bottom stop 105, top plug 110, and tube 115 can be made of metal, wood, plastic, glass, or stone, or a combination thereof. Stop 105 preferably forms a tight, slidable friction fit within tube 100. Alternatively, stop 105 can be glued, pinned, or crimped in place once the resonator has been tuned to the desired frequency. As indicated in
Operation
A marimba has tone bar or key such as key 800 (
E.g., if key 800 is sized and shaped to resonate at the note C2, i.e., two octaves below middle C, its fundamental vibration frequency will be 65.4 Hz and it will also vibrate at a set of higher frequencies that give it a characteristic timbre (sound quality). To enable an adjacent resonant oval tube 100 to resonate at this frequency yet still clear the floor below, a VET 115 is mounted in tube 100. Tube 100 has a length of 81.3 cm (32 in) and a major axis dimension of 25.4 cm (10 in) and a minor axis of 7.6 cm (3 in). VET 115 has a length of 27.9 cm (11 in) and a diameter of 7 cm (2.75 in). Both tubes are made of aluminum and plug 110 and stop 105 are made of a thermoplastic material, although other materials can be used. The inner and outer tubes for other keys having different resonant frequencies would have different sizes in accordance with the fundamental frequencies of their respective keys.
Prior to assembly, the resonant frequency of the resonator is determined by selecting the size, position, and shape of VET 115 in relation to tube 100. After assembly, the resonator is fine-tuned to the resonant frequency of key 800, by moving stop 105 upward or downward within tube 100. When the resonator is tuned to the frequency of key 800, the sound produced by the striking of key 800 and emanating from the combination of the key and resonator is enhanced, both in volume and in aesthetic quality.
A marimba contains one or more assemblies like that shown in
Description and Operation
Radius R typically varies from 1 mm to 1 cm, although other radii can be used. Instead of a circular shape with a fixed radius, an exponential or other gradual, convex shape can be used in region 1000. Angle θ varies from zero to 10 degrees, although other angles can be used.
The addition of the variables R and θ permits the designer to achieve tonal variations beyond those available from the first embodiment alone.
Accordingly the reader will see that, according to one or more aspects, we have provided an improved marimba that employs a novel resonator to produce aesthetically pleasing sounds with an enhanced fundamental frequency and less distortion.
While the above description contains many specificities, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope, but as exemplifications of some presently preferred embodiments. Many other ramifications and variations are possible within the teachings. For example, the components shown can be painted various colors, chrome plated, and the like. A plurality of resonators having different shapes can be used on the same instrument. Some resonators or their components can be made of one material, while others are made of a different material. In addition, all aspects of the preferred embodiment are scalable to any size. Many other shapes are possible and many other materials or combinations of materials can be used. Instead of hanging vertically, the resonator can be hung at any angle so long as the key is capable of exciting vibrations within the resonator. In addition to use on a marimba, the resonator can be used on a vibraphone or any other percussive instrument that employs one or more resonator tubes.
Thus the scope should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, and not by the examples given.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
967911 | Haskell | Aug 1910 | A |
1128112 | Deagan | Feb 1915 | A |
1173785 | Deagan | Feb 1916 | A |
1207281 | Deagan | Dec 1916 | A |
1969591 | Willis | Aug 1934 | A |
20080105105 | Stevens | May 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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200993870 | Dec 2007 | CN |