I was not aware that anyone had shown that all, most, or any given
amount of energy that bleeds through to the front duplex is "lost" one
way or the other. Tho I would love to see some study on the matter.
That vibrating energy can get reflected back through the front
termination is beyond question IMHO. Easy enough to show by simply
plucking on the front length and listening for the singing length to
come into vibration. Sustain is said to increase, at the expense of a
bit of volume... the usual trade-off
There are IMHO two issues with the front duplex. String noise created
by the condition of the termination and counter bearing parameters, and
the nature of the tone the front duplex length creates.
Leakage occurs anyways. Regardless of termination configuration. It
would suprise me to see it shown that one or another termination
configuration would loose significantly more energy in the form of heat
loss.
As for your closing comment. You should see the Grotrian Steinweg that
was rebuilt by Bechstein I've written about. I assure you ... the
choice of front duplex has a profound affect on the kind of sound
produced by the instrument
Cheers
RicB
Not sure I would agree with this. Loss of energy to the front
duplex in the
form of heat is simply lost. It will not be stored in order to be
reflected
back to the speaking length. The idea of the tuned front duplex was
that it
would vibrate sympathetically adding something to the overall tone. In
reality, the sympathetic tuning actually encourages leakage and loss of
energy. Detuning the duplex or shortening it or increasing the
counterbearing angle or increasing the mass in the capo bar (as in a
Boesendorfer) or some combination of all of these discourages "leakage"
reducing the potential loss of energy in that section.
Differences between pianos in the sound in that section are more likely
because of differences in hammer/soundboard interactions than duplex
design.
This is evidenced when one makes an alteration of an existing
counterbearing
area, say in a Steinway. There is no significant change in the
overall tone
but the tendency for leakage can be greatly reduced.
David Love
davidlovepianos at comcast.net
www.davidlovepianos.com
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