Anthony's comments about adjacent slips from the same piece of cane made me wonder if the north and south side of the cane would be of differing elasticity or density??
Variation with height is clearer, of course. John -----Original Message----- From: lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu [mailto:lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu] On Behalf Of Francis Wood Sent: 09 July 2010 14:00 To: Anthony Robb Cc: Dartmouth NPS; neihutch...@yahoo.com Subject: [NSP] Re: Reeds On 9 Jul 2010, at 13:38, Anthony Robb wrote: > I have looked at the resources you list but have found that Mike > Nelson's methods give by far the best results. Hello again . . . yes, you're right. I certainly should have included Mike's pages at: http://www.machineconcepts.co.uk/smallpipes/reeds.htm#chanter I agree too that there are so many variables in all of this. Samples of cane from the same batch and even the same stem can differ greatly, the density and hardness depending on the height the piece is cut from. Incidentally I made a surprisingly good reed from a Coke can a month or so ago. Further attempts demonstrated that even Coke cans vary a lot. Cheers, Francis To get on or off this list see list information at http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html