Short blog - building my own low D whistle

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GordonH
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Short blog - building my own low D whistle

Post by GordonH »

So I found these instructions:

http://www.ehhs.cmich.edu/~dhavlena/low-d.htm

and as I had a piece of 1 inch diameter aluminium alloy tubing I decided to give it a go.

Yesterday:

Cut the tube to approximate length plus 2 cm to give me some leeway for error.

Cut the window and filed out the burrs.
To do this I put masking tape on the tube, marked it out in pencil, drilled the short edges with a small drill bit and used a fine junior hacksaw blade to cut the top and bottom, then I filed them out using a needle file.

Made the fipple plug.
To do this I cut a bit off the end of the handle of an old garden brush which was a good fit in the tube already.
Put some sandpaper on my workbench and rubbed it backwards and forwards till I had taken enough off it to get an airway 17mm wide (to match the window)

Made the ramp.
I used a hammer and the round end of a radiator plug to "panel beat" the depressed area over a large number of strikes with the hammer.
I tried to align the edge of the lip so it was straight but this is not easy with aluminium, I can see now why so many makers mill out the lips in aluminium whistles.
Then I filed the edge slightly sharper to give me a start at being able to make a sound.

Shaped the wind way.
I put the fipple plug in the tube, taped the tube to my bench with gaffer tape and used a block of wood and a hammer to shape the top of the airway slightly flatter. Again a lot of short sharp strikes while moving over the area to prevent the tube being damaged. The wood protects it also.

Testing.
Took whistle indoors and left it to reach room temperature then blew some air through it to warm it up.
Taped the fipple block in place and was surprised to make a sound, this was a bottom C#

Glue the fipple block.
I used impact adhesive because thats what I had.
I also used it to fill the gaps between the wood and the tube now that it had been slightly distorted.

Total time to do all of the above was about one hour plus coffee break.
I had to leave it for the glue to set overnight.

Tools used so far:

Hammer
Wood block
Mitre saw (to get the fipple block ends straight, although you could use any saw).
Sandpaper
Junior hacksaw with a fine blade
electric drill and drill bits
needle files
chromatic tuner (could use a piano or other tuning aid)


Today:

Checked for seal round the fipple block and all was OK
Warmed it up and tested the tuning, still just under C#.

Spent one hour (yes one hour) trying to get the manufacturers label off the tube!
It was laminated on with plastic and I ended up using solvent.

Tuning of root note D
Cut the tube with hacksaw about 6mm at a time till I was showing a flat D.
Then very carefully took small amounts off (filing might be easier) until I hit it correctly.

Making of holes
I put masking tape right down the centre of the tube and marked the centre line in pencil.
Then calculated the positions of the holes using the formula in the article.
I decided to offset some of the holes as I have short fingers and I did this by looking at pictures of commercial whistles.
Drilled the holes with a small drill bit and removed the masking tape.

Tuning
Started on the furthest away hole, enlarging it with successive drill bits until it got higher in pitch and nearly in tune.
Then used tapered reamer to adjust it more precisely.
Could use a rat tail file for this or just successively larger drill bits.

Tools used today in addition to yesterday:

Tapered reamers (not necessary, could use a file or drill bits)

Time spent in total so far, about two hours in total plus the time it took to get that label off.

So far I have bottom two notes playing in tune.
Next task will be to tune the other notes and then make sure the lip adjustment is right for a good tone on every note.

Will post about this later.
GordonH
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Re: Short blog - building my own low D whistle

Post by GordonH »

Couple of photos of the progress so far:

http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/gordonhud ... 0654061234
You can see that the holes are all still small apart from the bottom one which has been tuned.
The rest will get bigger as I work my way up.

http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/gordonhud ... 1869598626
The mouthpiece will be cut at an angle and filed smooth.
The lip will need adjusted to make a clear sound on all notes, but even in this state its actually sounding good on the two notes that work.
GordonH
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Re: Short blog - building my own low D whistle

Post by GordonH »

I work from home so at lunch time I made a quick sandwich and started tuning the whistle.
I did each note in turn, opening up the hole with successively larger drill bits till it was just below pitch, then I went back and used a tapered reamer to finely adjust the holes.
It was a bit fiddly, but took half an hour to complete.
Because I knew I would have to clean the holes I stayed slightly flat on the note so I can adjust again later.
I was surprised at how big some of the holes were but they were in line with the sizes the author of the article ended up with.
At this point I was glad I offset the holes.

Total time: 30 minutes

I then used a half round needle file to de burr the top and bottom surfaces of each hole.
I used some P600 paper to clean up the lip which has improved the volume.

So I now have a working low D whistle.

Will post a clip here later so you can all here how it sounds.

I still need to shape the mouthpiece and varnish the end of the fipple block to protect it.
I think making that diagonal cut might be quite difficult with hand tools.
Will do it later and report back.
GordonH
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Re: Short blog - building my own low D whistle

Post by GordonH »

OK, we have a working whistle.

Here is a clip of me playing the Dark Island on it:

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=xfADeHFpors

A functional low D in under three hours using basic household tools, and I have never made a woodwind instrument before.
I have to say, I am surprised and even slightly shocked.
Its not an Overton or even a Susato but it works!

A couple of the notes are still a bit flat and need pulled up but I will do that with a rat tail file, gradually over the next few days.
I will cut the mouthpiece to shape later today and varnish the wooden end.
I may also adjust the windway to make it more efficient and send more of the air onto the lip blade.
GordonH
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Re: Short blog - building my own low D whistle

Post by GordonH »

Photo of what it looks like with the holes correctly tuned:

http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/gordonhud ... 3299008530
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captaindolder
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Re: Short blog - building my own low D whistle

Post by captaindolder »

Well done Gordon. While it may not fetch the bids like a Copeland Low D, anytime you can create music with something you've created is an accomplishment.
“There’s no limit to what a man can do or where he can go if he doesn’t mind who gets the credit.” President Ronald Reagan
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DrPhill
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Re: Short blog - building my own low D whistle

Post by DrPhill »

Well done. It must be very satisfying to make and play your own instrument.

I too would like to make my own, and you make it sound easy. I have everything but the tube.

Oh, so much to do, so little time.
Phill

One does not equal two. Not even for very large values of one.
GordonH
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Re: Short blog - building my own low D whistle

Post by GordonH »

Thanks guys, well I had the tubing already. I always have bits of aluminium lying around from my antenna fabrications.
I have shaped the mouthpiece end and am re gluing the fipple block, then I just have to varnish the wooden end to protect it.

Going to lacquer coat it and also the top of the mouthpiece because I had a bad reaction to an aluminium trumpet mouthpiece once (so did a lot of people which is why they stopped making them).

If anything, resetting the fipple block made it louder.
I meant to burn the top of the block to harden the surface a bit but its too lat enow.
Maybe the next one I build.
I can see me doing more of these.
Maybe a very mellow C made from half inch plumbing pipe next.
crickett
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Re: Short blog - building my own low D whistle

Post by crickett »

Cool! Thanks for sharing.
GordonH
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Re: Short blog - building my own low D whistle

Post by GordonH »

Having made the angled cut for the mouthpiece I realised that there was going to be a tendency for my bottom lip to lever the wooden block up the way and slightly narrow the airway. To stop this happening I drilled a hole through the bottom of the tube and screwed the fipple block to the tube using this. The adhesive might be strong enough but a bit of over engineering does no harm.

I have now sprayed the mouthpiece end with clear lacquer and its going to take some time to settle down. Will give it another blow tonight and see how I get on.
One not is noticeably flat in both octaves so one hole needs enlarged slightly and then that will be it.
GordonH
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Re: Short blog - building my own low D whistle

Post by GordonH »

I recorded a bit of Hot Asphalt to try out a faster tune:

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=Za4s8M4kNN8

I am glad I offset those holes.
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