Hardened steel. I like blue tempered spring steel.
But you can get good tones from nails that are forged and I have even heard good sound from iron though there is the rust issue and it is more brittle.
First off, my hat off to ya buddy, gorgeous creation!
=2 questions for ya=
1. - I'm really amazed by how great the tone is overall, but especially on the knitting needle, was this a special knitting needle you used?
2. - I'm planning on putting a lamellaphone on a guitar, have you tried using this thing with a standard solid top with a hole drilled in it? If so, what have been the results of the vibrations? Good, bad, OK?
1. It is solid and thin not like the tube style needles. It was in a box of stuff for knitting supplies at a thrift store maybe a specialty tool, not sure.
2. For an acoustic guitar, the wood is so thin a hardwood plate would need to be glued on to screw into and keep the soundboard from splitting. A solid body electric no problem. Vibrations would depend on the type of tine being used.
At the Instructables site there is a kalimba on an old guitar. Search using the word: Mbira.
The ability to use tines that sound bell like (like the center one) and , in a way, to be able to customize each individual tine is a major breakthrough in lamellaphone design (thanks for the word, I'd never heard it).
Also, my wife and I love your sign off music.........can you tell us how you made that?
It's just haunting as hell...........very primal and yet very modern in the same breath.
hi hi, just wondering if you could let me know what kind of metal works best to get a clearer pitch? cheers pal. x x
rhodawelsh 3 years ago 2
Hardened steel. I like blue tempered spring steel.
But you can get good tones from nails that are forged and I have even heard good sound from iron though there is the rust issue and it is more brittle.
tynego 3 years ago
First off, my hat off to ya buddy, gorgeous creation!
=2 questions for ya=
1. - I'm really amazed by how great the tone is overall, but especially on the knitting needle, was this a special knitting needle you used?
2. - I'm planning on putting a lamellaphone on a guitar, have you tried using this thing with a standard solid top with a hole drilled in it? If so, what have been the results of the vibrations? Good, bad, OK?
Yer awesome.
sleepyashes 4 years ago
1. It is solid and thin not like the tube style needles. It was in a box of stuff for knitting supplies at a thrift store maybe a specialty tool, not sure.
2. For an acoustic guitar, the wood is so thin a hardwood plate would need to be glued on to screw into and keep the soundboard from splitting. A solid body electric no problem. Vibrations would depend on the type of tine being used.
At the Instructables site there is a kalimba on an old guitar. Search using the word: Mbira.
tynego 4 years ago
where did you get the suction cup microphone?
stopglobalswarming 4 years ago
It is a tuner pickup for acoustic guitar. Many music stores that sell acoustic instruments will carry some version of it.
tynego 4 years ago
ARE WE THERE YET< Mom he's touching my lamellophone! STop it.
stopglobalswarming 4 years ago
that's sweet dude. I like the crayola box.
joeloula 4 years ago
i really like this :p
the sound is very unique and interesting, congratulations on making something so wonderful :p
ediblesponge 4 years ago
wow. i like it a lot
Pantalaimion 4 years ago
cool
cwal99 4 years ago
This is so wonderful and creative.
The ability to use tines that sound bell like (like the center one) and , in a way, to be able to customize each individual tine is a major breakthrough in lamellaphone design (thanks for the word, I'd never heard it).
Also, my wife and I love your sign off music.........can you tell us how you made that?
It's just haunting as hell...........very primal and yet very modern in the same breath.
looppool 4 years ago
The end audio bit was done with 2 electrician's snake tines using a pitch shifter and the Kaoss Pad.
tynego 4 years ago