|
Amorey (25), clarence (77), Ejay (37), energy101 (24), ixxi (24), JeanieA (52), Jet Black (16), kdecker (50), Marco Ribeiro (22), musicmaniac (77), NWTrojan (49), paul mourino (31), pcpiano (18), pearlsanddreams (45), pianofreak72 (37), Rogo64 (45), RPD (51), showpann (19), soulfairy (23), Tater_Salad (20) |
|
|
#1213469 - 06/07/09 05:33 PM
World's smallest musical instrument
|
500 Post Club Member
Registered: 04/16/07
Posts: 847
Loc: Olympia, WA
|
Reading the thread about the world's largest piano, I started wondering about the worlds smallest instrument. I came across the story of the Nanoharp. The new device is carved out of a single crystal of silicon. The strings are actually silicon rods 50 nanometres (nm) in diameter, ranging from about 1,000 to 8,000nm long. A nanometre is one billionth of a meter, making each string about 150 atoms thick.
The entire device is about the size of a red blood cell.  Here is a link to the story: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/309522.stm
Edited by rysowers (06/07/09 05:34 PM)
_________________________
"The smallest changes are the hardest to make" Ryan Sowers, RPT Pianova Piano Service Olympia, Washington www.pianova.net
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#1213921 - 06/08/09 12:13 PM
Re: World's smallest musical instrument
[Re: rysowers]
|
500 Post Club Member
Registered: 04/02/08
Posts: 716
Loc: Niagara Region, On. Canada
|
I guess it would be appropriate to mention the worlds "largest" instrument which would be the carillon. It is a series of bells either located in a tower structure or built into a cage. The keyboard (baton) is hit with the fists and there are also keys that are operated with your foot.
The Riverside Church in NYC is regarded as having the largest carillon with its largest bell (called a bourdon) measuring over 10 feet across and weighing 41000 lbs. It must have been quite a feat to cast that without any cracking. The largest carillon in regards to the number of bells is located in South Eastern Michigan at Kirk in the Hills Presbyterian and it has 77 bells.
I think about how much it can bug us when we have to linger longer than the normal few seconds to tune a problem note on a piano. I imagine the factory tuner for these largest bells was probably equipped with a grinder and a chisel and spent a couple days whittling a couple hundred pounds of material down to get the right tone. "You want HOW MUCH to tune just one note?"
_________________________
Piano Technician George Brown College /85 Niagara Region
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
46547 Members
37 Forums
95009 Topics
1304136 Posts
Max Online: 1930 @ 06/05/09 03:23 PM
|
|
|