I was recently going through my inventory of instruments at the school where I teach. I came across a rather odd cornet. Its lead-pipe followed the regular path forwards and around downward to the valves, but instead of entering the valve casing at the third valve, it continued onwards and curled back up and entered into the first valve. The airflow goes through in the order of 1st valve, second, and finally exiting out of the third valve. It then makes a sharp turn backwards towards the first valve before turning up to a regular-ish looking bell section. I couldn't find any markings or cereal numbers. Have you heard of such an instrument?
This is not awfully uncommon, some King and HN White cornets did this, as well as other US-Made instruments. If you want to send me some photos I can look further.
Yes, but the pipes are constructed to make that as hard as possible. There are some pipes, like harmonic flutes, which are designed to be overblown to speak their octave, and those pipes are constructed in such a way that it's practically impossible to blow their fundamental.
The behaviour of the airstream in an organ pipe (and in a recorder) can also be seen in the way that water comes out of a garden hose. Initially it comes out straight, then after a few inches it starts to oscillate, then finally it dissipates randomly. In the organ pipe, the oscillating stage is where the airstream splits on the fipple and creates the regular waveform in the pipe which we hear as a musical pitch.
We have open pipes, which are half a wavelength long, and we have closed pipes, which are a quarter of a wavelength long. This is an open pipe, but the tuning mechanism partly closes it. If this mechanism can close the pipe more than intended, it will suddenly become a whole octave deeper.
looks more like a larger version of a kid’s train whistle, then again it’s the exact same principle of a single not that only changes based on how hord or long you blow through it
Ok. I'm curious. Why the vertical video orientation? Did you do this on a phone? Even if you did - it would have been possible to orient the phone horizontally...Always love your videos...got a mate from my kindergarten days who lives in Pukekohe North Island...he was a 'penpal' arranged by my kindergarten teacher...REALLY want to visit NZ some time...Just heard that your PM is stepping down...she must have heard that super-cheap pocket trumpet!!! heh heh heh - cheers from Toronto!
I'm going to guess it was the Covid Diet Plan: Get sick, don't eat for weeks, lose weight! I used the Pneumonia/Pleurisy Diet Plan. I couldn't recommend it though... it doesn't do the lungs any favours...
Holy balls, I haven’t watched a Trent Hamilton video in a couple years, looks like a new man
Old model was defective, I took over a couple years back. Most people haven't caught on.
An instrument that plays one note? That'd be bagpipes then...
Or normal flutes as played by primary schoolers.
Or really any instrument played by primary schoolers
@@gamingmusicmishaps A wailing screeching school-age violin plays every note all at the same time... Except the one that you want to hear.
@@bikkies Yes
The drones of bagpipes playing one "note" tho!!! But the chanter is another story 😂😂😂
I was recently going through my inventory of instruments at the school where I teach. I came across a rather odd cornet. Its lead-pipe followed the regular path forwards and around downward to the valves, but instead of entering the valve casing at the third valve, it continued onwards and curled back up and entered into the first valve. The airflow goes through in the order of 1st valve, second, and finally exiting out of the third valve. It then makes a sharp turn backwards towards the first valve before turning up to a regular-ish looking bell section. I couldn't find any markings or cereal numbers. Have you heard of such an instrument?
This is not awfully uncommon, some King and HN White cornets did this, as well as other US-Made instruments. If you want to send me some photos I can look further.
Can over blowing cause another note like a recorder or harmonica?
Yes, but the pipes are constructed to make that as hard as possible. There are some pipes, like harmonic flutes, which are designed to be overblown to speak their octave, and those pipes are constructed in such a way that it's practically impossible to blow their fundamental.
@@TrentHamilton thanks for the info!
The behaviour of the airstream in an organ pipe (and in a recorder) can also be seen in the way that water comes out of a garden hose. Initially it comes out straight, then after a few inches it starts to oscillate, then finally it dissipates randomly. In the organ pipe, the oscillating stage is where the airstream splits on the fipple and creates the regular waveform in the pipe which we hear as a musical pitch.
Eagerly awaiting the finished product!! 😊😊
So am I!
Sounds like a calliope
Trent stop aging backwards, you're making the rest of us jealous!
New Zealand?
That is not a flute
It is ✨ squidward’s clarinet ✨
Based username
We have open pipes, which are half a wavelength long, and we have closed pipes, which are a quarter of a wavelength long. This is an open pipe, but the tuning mechanism partly closes it. If this mechanism can close the pipe more than intended, it will suddenly become a whole octave deeper.
The St Mathews Church in the city (auckland) has a beautiful pipe organ
looks more like a larger version of a kid’s train whistle, then again it’s the exact same principle of a single not that only changes based on how hord or long you blow through it
The Rick Beato “just like that”
Ok. I'm curious. Why the vertical video orientation? Did you do this on a phone? Even if you did - it would have been possible to orient the phone horizontally...Always love your videos...got a mate from my kindergarten days who lives in Pukekohe North Island...he was a 'penpal' arranged by my kindergarten teacher...REALLY want to visit NZ some time...Just heard that your PM is stepping down...she must have heard that super-cheap pocket trumpet!!! heh heh heh - cheers from Toronto!
UA-cam shorts have to be in vertical video format.
The woodwind section. A collection of oddball instruments that don't really matter.
Looking great
I know it’s not what you channel is about but it’d be awesome if you did a video about your workout/diet to lose all that weight man!
I'm going to guess it was the Covid Diet Plan: Get sick, don't eat for weeks, lose weight! I used the Pneumonia/Pleurisy Diet Plan. I couldn't recommend it though... it doesn't do the lungs any favours...
Nice g
Very interesting .
Cool!
This is pretty good
nice flute
Great!
hi
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