Measuring Good Vibrations 32
Chris writes "A laser vibrometer finds its first application analyzing the vibrations in a guitar when different strings are plucked.
The laser Doppler vibrometer (LDV) measures displacement and vibration speeds at 16 separate points simultaneously. The first application of the XVI is musical, analyzing the vibrations produced in a guitar when its E-string (the fattest string) was plucked.
Analysis of this kind could prove useful for enthusiasts and manufacturers trying to replicate the sound made by old musical instruments in their new designs. They want to know what made these old instruments sound so good."
oh great (Score:2, Funny)
Why so good? (Score:4, Funny)
They should look into a little thing called "talent". I know it's not a very popular thing today, but I'll bet you 99 times out of a hundred it's why that older music sounds better than now...
Re:Why so good? (Score:1)
I think this Jurassic Park quote sums it up for me
Scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could they didn't stop to think if they should
Re:Why so good? (Score:1)
Now, let's just forget all that and Payola and go on with our thinking that no matter what, our time was better than whatever time we're living in now.
Re:Why so good? (Score:2)
Re:Why so good? (Score:1)
Why, (Score:2)
Re:Why, (Score:4, Informative)
the XVI instrument offers a "new concept" in vibrometry, as it can measure the rate of phase change at various points of a vibrating object.
Ever notice how a guitar string sound decays and modulates a bit as the sound fades away? We can measure that...and reproduce it...but this lets us look underneath the hood a bit. Of course, depending upon where on the string the pick/finger hits it, and how hard it is struck, it's going change phase at a different rate. They can measure the results of that phase change (in the wave form) now, but an increased understanding of how the material itself vibrates, correlated with the waveform change over time, will bring new understanding to the physics of sound.
Re:Why, (Score:3, Informative)
The way a guitar creates the waveform you hear is not only dependant on vibrations in the string, but also resonant vibrations on other strings, the soundboard, back, neck, head, bridge, and nut. Looking at how these components make up the resulting waveform could allow actual Engineering of a classic sound and it's nuances, rather than just a close approximation.
The article also mentions the auto industry as a potential candidate for this technology. Structural Engineering is another that came to mind.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Question (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
I know somewhat guitar but... (Score:1)
--
Hire a concert 1-800-...
Re: I know somewhat guitar but... (Score:1)
>
Yep. And G-string means GNU-string.
Let's fall for nostalgia for once... (Score:2, Interesting)
Well, let me see. In the ol'(which maybe was not so good [ifilm.com]) time, instruments where done by people who where master of their art, which in turn took years to produce.
They were respected for their unique knowledge, and made apprentice of young people that wanted to learn it. Of course, since making a "proper" instrument was a revered art, it took time as well.
But as time passed, this apprenticeship business losed its appeal for the young generations.
Why ? Because after all it was hard, masters tended to be harsh, brutal and extremely demanding. And they wanted their "secrets" to be closely kept too.
This was eventually replaced by mass industrialisation: producing always cheaper goods with far less dedication and quality, but for everybody to access.
The difference here is clear: current instrument maker simply do not have the same goal and values as past ones.
Is it good, or is it bad ? Who knows, and I'm not the one to start the debate.
But even if they manage to find why a stradivarius is a stradivarius, will they simply be willing to reproduce it truly, and not a scaled-down version of "process" ? I doubt it. Because it might take something that is not only technical. Or maybe those instruments are going to be an elite-thing again.
And in my opinion, there we lose the interest.
Re:Let's fall for nostalgia for once... (Score:2)
Re:Let's fall for nostalgia for once... (Score:1)
Exactly, my point is that even if you manage to find the "what", you might have real difficulties to find the "how". Because the "how" depends on a situation and mindset that is really foreign to the modern minds. </BeeingStubborn>
Re:Let's fall for nostalgia for once... (Score:2)
Computer cases (Score:2, Interesting)
Then we could get closer to a silent PC without haveing to go to extreme measures.
This is cool (Score:1)
Re:Why (Score:1)
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/11/
How complicated is this technology? (Score:1)
Re:How complicated is this technology? (Score:1)
Um, Roland's little GK-A2 dohickey installs on your own steel-string guitar. How can it not feel or play like a real axe? I put one on a cheap stat copy and it didn't change the feel at all - it's just a new pickup.
Beach Boys (Score:2)
Don't they allready have this? (Score:3, Informative)