[Woodcarver] terry zobl whistles
Bill Smith
baydolphs at yahoo.com
Sat Oct 30 01:07:33 EDT 2004
Thank u for bein so nice and tellin me I was given
good ideas of what could be wrong. I personally have
not made many whiles but I have made wind chimes and I
used that as the base for the cause of the problem..
I carve what I want then turn in make a top n then
string the wind chimes so that they are in order of my
design then I cut my pipe to what I am lookin for in
sounds and I found from doin this a whisle can me made
from followin the laws of the wind in boxes as well..
Bill Smith
--- terry zobl <tzobl at email.com> wrote:
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> Greetings Butch Johnson
> The advise from Bill Smith and Bob Mau was very good
> so I assume they have made whistles.
>
> Here is what I do;
> Drill the chamber hole in a stick. The hole must be
> smooth. If you drill wet wood there will be loose
> fibers hanging which is difficult to clean up.
> Using dry wood makes it easier to get the chamber
> hole smooth even if you need to sand it. If you
> drill too far and creat an air leak you will need to
> seal it or throw it away and start over. Sometimes
> I chip carve too deep and cause an air leak which
> usually I can seal by dripping some glue into the
> chamber and sealing from the inside.
>
> There are two holes, the slot hole and the blow-into
> hole, and size does matter. I usually cut these a
> bit small at first and gradually make them bigger as
> I am tuning the whistle. The blow-into hole is cut
> on the plug and must be flat and smooth.
>
> The trickiest part is the location of the plug in
> relation to the slot hole. In general you insert
> the plug far enough to reach the slot hole. However
> very minor adjustments in or out is the most
> critical adjustment to making the whistle work.
>
> You play with the depth of the plug in the chamber
> hole until you find the spot where it whistles.
> Then you gradually increase the size of the two
> holes to tune it for loudness.
>
> When you are satisfied with the settings you glue in
> the plug and test/adjust it again before the glue
> sets.
>
> Sometimes after the glue dries I find that the
> blow-into hole is a bit restricted which I clean up
> with a flat needle file or woodburning tool.
>
> When all done I soak the whistle in boiled linseed
> oil and that seams to make it whistle even better.
>
> If anyone has made whistles I would sure like to see
> some pictures.
>
> http://community.webshots.com/album/131250938MjKQlC
> Terry Zobl, Michigan
>
>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>
> can someone help me -- I can't get my whistles to
> sound load - I have tried and tried -- what is the
> secret?
> Butch Johnson
> --
>
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