Far vibrare uno strumento appena montato aiuta a favorire l'assestamento e a liberare le tensioni, velocizzando la maturazione iniziale del suono. Chiaramente suonare direttamente e fisicamente lo strumento sarebbe sicuramente la cosa più efficace, ma farlo vibrare attraverso un trasduttore applicato al ponticello è meglio che niente (e niente affatto dannoso) e permette di prolungare per molte ore i tempi di vibrazione ascoltando contemporaneamente buona musica utilizzando il nostro strumento come cassa acustica. Utilizzo un trasduttore osseo Radioear B-71 modificato con l'applicazione di un adattatore in acero per fissarlo al ponticello. Lo attacco all'uscita cuffie della scheda audio esterna del mio PC (Behringer UMC204HD), che permette un'amplificazione maggiore del segnale rispetto alla normale uscita cuffie. In alternativa si potrebbe usare un amplificatore per cuffie, per fare in modo che il volume prodotto dal dispositivo sia sufficiente per essere efficace.
Vibrating a newly finished instrument helps promote settling in and release tensions, speeding up the initial maturation of the sound. Obviously, playing the instrument directly and physically would certainly be the most effective method, but vibrating it through a transducer attached to the bridge is better than nothing (and not harmful at all) and allows you to extend the vibration time for many hours (days?) while simultaneously listening to good music using your instrument as a sound box. I use a Radioear B-71 bone transducer modified with a maple adapter to attach it to the bridge. I connect it to the headphone output of my PC's external sound card (Behringer UMC204HD), which allows for greater signal amplification than the normal headphone output. Alternatively, you could use a headphone amplifier to ensure that the volume produced by the device is sufficient to be effective.
Index of all my videos on violin making:
English: https://davidesora.altervista.org/videos/
Italiano: https://davidesora.altervista.org/video/
Davide Sora® is a registered trademark
Davide Sora® è un marchio registrato
Vibrating a newly finished instrument helps promote settling in and release tensions, speeding up the initial maturation of the sound. Obviously, playing the instrument directly and physically would certainly be the most effective method, but vibrating it through a transducer attached to the bridge is better than nothing (and not harmful at all) and allows you to extend the vibration time for many hours (days?) while simultaneously listening to good music using your instrument as a sound box. I use a Radioear B-71 bone transducer modified with a maple adapter to attach it to the bridge. I connect it to the headphone output of my PC's external sound card (Behringer UMC204HD), which allows for greater signal amplification than the normal headphone output. Alternatively, you could use a headphone amplifier to ensure that the volume produced by the device is sufficient to be effective.
Index of all my videos on violin making:
English: https://davidesora.altervista.org/videos/
Italiano: https://davidesora.altervista.org/video/
Davide Sora® is a registered trademark
Davide Sora® è un marchio registrato
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