How Can My Reed Organ Be In Tune and Yet Out Of
Tune?
The truth is
most reed organs rarely, if ever, go out of
tune. Once the brass reeds are tuned at the
factory they usually stay that way – it’s not like a
piano.
However, what most reed organ owners
don't realize is that back over a hundred years ago there
was no industry standard. So reed
organs (as well as a lot of pianos) were tuned to A-435,
or A-440, and yet others were tuned to A-452 or A-462.
Of course today the music industry standard is
A-440.
Some reed organ owners ask me if
there's any way their organ can be retuned to
A-440. The answer is yes, but it's not
an easy task. In order to accomplish
this each brass reed must be removed and readjusted and
replaced for testing. However, the
catch is that it usually takes several tries to get
a reed correctly adjusted.
It’s largely a matter of trial and
error. In order to make an adjustment
you need to carefully file off a small amount of brass
from the tongue of the reed, then replace the reed back
into the reed chamber, play the note and see if you're at
the right spot.
If you file off too much, then you'll pass
by the point where you should be. On
the other hand, if you didn't take enough off, you need
to keep at it until it's sounding at the right pitch.
And if your reed organ happens to
have 4 or 5 hundred reeds, it's a major
project.
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