[pianotech] Q & A Roundtable (metronomes)

Mr. Mac's tune-repair at allegiance.tv
Sun Jan 30 11:34:48 MST 2011


Ron, Paul, (now there's a heck of a coincident)

Finally got that video to show without doing anything extra.
It was fascinating to watch, but I don't get what actually happened or why.

Moving the platform of the metronomes onto the aluminum cans didn't help me at all either.

Any simple offering to help one in need to know what actually happened here?

If not, that's okay. Maybe it will come to me later on down the road, like the video did

Keith

> Ron,
> 
> I can't seem to get that YouTube clip to activate.
> 
> Did you sign in or sign up to do so?
> 
> Keith
> 
> On Jan 29, 2011, at 2:31 PM, Ron Nossaman wrote:
> 
> > On 1/29/2011 2:08 PM, PAULREVENKOJONES at aol.com wrote:
> >> In a message dated 1/29/2011 1:56:45 P.M. Central Standard Time,
> >> rnossaman at cox.net writes:
> >> 
> >>    I read about a clock maker who noticed that the pendulums of all the
> >>    clocks on the same wall, all with the same internal works, tended to
> >>    synchronize with one another while the one on another wall didn't.
> >>    Strings in a unison do that too.
> >> 
> >> Here is the demonstration of that priniciple:
> >> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1TMZASCR-I
> > 
> > Yes, and a good one. Note that if the period of one is close enough to those around it, they'll synchronize, like the ones on the right. If they're too far off, like the two on the left, they won't lock in. In unison strings, when you hear an obvious beat, they're too far off to lock in. When you hear the yow, they're trying to synchronize, but the attack is still objectionable.
> > Ron N
> 
> 


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