There’s a bit of erroneous info here on bass pipes, for “mitering” vs. “Haskelling”... At 19:04 “you can see that they’re folded, and they call that Haskelling”. Actually, the folded pipes shown in the video (at least that part of the video) are mitered, not Haskelled. Folding = mitering. Folding ≠ Haskelling. There’s no tonal compromise involved with mitered pipes, at least not if it’s done well, as these appear to be. Haskelling is different, which involves a smaller capped tube inserted partway into an otherwise open pipe. With that, some change to the tone quality will occur. A pipe could be both mitered and Haskelled, but then a significant portion of the pipe would need to be “after” the miter, to allow enough space for the Haskell tube to reside. The after-miter portion of these pipes looks too short for that. At 19:23 there appears to be some sort of tube on the wall above a non-mitered pipe, but my guess is that’s either an elecrical conduit or a small wind conductor, not a Haskell tube.
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Very good channel 👍 👏 👌 Thank you 👏 😍
Another great episode, some splendid info, and wonderful organ playing!
There’s a bit of erroneous info here on bass pipes, for “mitering” vs. “Haskelling”... At 19:04 “you can see that they’re folded, and they call that Haskelling”. Actually, the folded pipes shown in the video (at least that part of the video) are mitered, not Haskelled. Folding = mitering. Folding ≠ Haskelling. There’s no tonal compromise involved with mitered pipes, at least not if it’s done well, as these appear to be. Haskelling is different, which involves a smaller capped tube inserted partway into an otherwise open pipe. With that, some change to the tone quality will occur. A pipe could be both mitered and Haskelled, but then a significant portion of the pipe would need to be “after” the miter, to allow enough space for the Haskell tube to reside. The after-miter portion of these pipes looks too short for that. At 19:23 there appears to be some sort of tube on the wall above a non-mitered pipe, but my guess is that’s either an elecrical conduit or a small wind conductor, not a Haskell tube.