Publicité

Annonce

Réduire
Aucune annonce.

Kezaco cette basse ?

Réduire
X
 
  • Filtre
  • Heure
  • Afficher
Tout nettoyer
nouveaux messages

  • Kezaco cette basse ?

    En jetant un œil sur cette vidéo de Dirty Loops je me suis aperçu que la basse d'Henrik Linder a des frettes irrégulières, je n'avais pas fait gaffe à ça primitivement et je n'avais jamais vu ça de ma vie, quelqu'un a t'il une explication pour cette curiosité qui m'interpelle ?

    http://deslysproduction.com

  • #2
    TT-frets are the best thing that ever happened to the guitar. I believe you should have invented the frets before you invented the string. Once you tried it, there is no going back.



    What does “True Temperament” mean?

    The TRUE TEMPERAMENT™ Fretting System is a revolutionary new way to construct guitar fingerboards which tune accurately along the whole neck.

    TRUE TEMPERAMENT™ does not imply Just Intonation. It is physically impossible to implement Just Intonation in more than one specific key (and its relative minor) on any instrument with only 12 intervals in the octave. (Except perhaps for computer-controlled instruments using electronically generated sounds.)
    What we mean by TRUE TEMPERAMENT™ is that our fretting system will give you super-accurate intonation over the whole fingerboard in the temperament it is constructed for.

    What’s wrong with straight frets?

    Standard equal tempered fret spacing is calculated from one single piece of information about the instrument – the scale length (the theoretical speaking length of the open strings). A divisor constant is used to determine the locations of the frets. The scale length divided by the constant gives the position of the first fret. The remaining length after subtracting the first fret, divided by the same constant, gives the position of the second fret, and so on.

    The divisor used by all but a vanishingly small percentage of modern guitar builders is 17.817152, a figure arrived at by way of the logarithmic function “the 12th root of 2″ (1.0594631). This results in precise mathematical fret spacing with the 12th fret at the exact centre of the calculated scale length. If the calculation is repeated for 24 frets, the distance from the 24th fret to the theoretical bridge saddle position will be exactly one-fourth of the calculated scale length. (The residual error is ridiculously small, less than one ten thousandth of an inch on popular guitar scales.) All very impressive. But this mathematical model is a gross oversimplification. It ignores virtually every physical parameter which governs the behaviour of vibrating strings, except one – speaking length. Tension and mass are not even considered.
    The model assumes an “ideal” or “perfect” string – one which only exists in theory, not in the real world. It assumes, firstly, that the strings have no stiffness. Secondly, it assumes that all strings behave identically, regardless of their thickness, whether they are plain or wound, and the material they are made of. Thirdly, it assumes zero string height – and completely ignores what happens when the strings are pressed down on the frets!
    The frequency of a vibrating string is determined by three factors: the speaking length, its mass, and the tension applied. All three of these factors are affected to varying degrees when a string is pressed down on a fret. Along the neck, the length and mass decrease by 50% per octave. Changing the length affects the stiffness. The tension is affected by fretting the string, as the string height is not zero. Pressing the string to the fret stretches the string slightly, increasing the tension and thus sharpening the notes produced.
    The strings themselves vary considerably in diameter and construction (plain or wound), and thus react differently to being fretted. One single adjustment per string at the bridge (“intonation”) cannot possibly fully compensate for all these parameters at once, as they all vary in different degrees on different strings.
    The only way to fully compensate for all these parameters is to adjust each and every string-to-fret contact point on the fingerboard separately, until each and every note plays the target frequency exactly. This, which is impossible on a guitar with traditional, one-piece, straight frets, is exactly what we do with Dynamic Intonation™, and Curved Frets™.
    Previous attempts at implementing non-standard temperaments on the guitar, or of adding extra intervals, have relied on adding extra frets, or splitting the frets into separate pieces. This makes it very difficult, if not impossible, to employ modern rock and blues playing techniques like stringbending.
    Our Curved Frets™ let you play the way you are used to.
    Bienvenue dans le monde étrange de l'acoustique !

    Commentaire


    • #3
      Oui, je me doutais d'un truc comme ça puisque les violoniste jouent avec les comas et qu'on sait que le système tonale à demi-ton égaux est faux mais je ne savais pas que ça pouvait se matérialiser avec des frettes.
      Merci pour ta recherche.
      http://deslysproduction.com

      Commentaire

      Chargement...
      X