Basically, a xylophone is a percussion instrument where sound is produced by striking wooden bars of graduated length, mounted upon a resonator. Therefore, the best plan for making a xylophone is as follows.
Notice, the following is my own method which requires some woodworking skill. For other, easier methods, Google "making a xylophone" or something to that effect.
Make a number of bars of some sort of hardwood, preferably rosewood. If you are a fairly skilled musician, maybe 13 or 25 bars will be best (1 or 2 chromatic octaves). These bars should be maybe a quarter of an inch (1cm) thick, 1 inch wide, and all of them should be initially cut off to 1 foot. If you are a starving concert artist or a highly gifted amateur, you should have the full range of 1/2' C to very high C (37 bars).
Now it is time to tune these bars. Place a bar on a piece of foam or insulation or a thick carpet. Use an electrical tuner for the tuning, unless your ear is so good that you can do it with pitch pipes or a fork by counting the beats (if you do not understand the beating concept, you need not learn it now). Tune the longest bar to the note you wish the longest bar to sound at, and tune the others at the pitches you want them to sound. I will come back to this at the end.
Let us assume that all the bars are tuned, and are at their proper length. You must now place the bars on a board that will hold them steady as they are struck. To determine the dimensions of this board, align the "naturals" (C D E F G A B etc) on the ground so they lie like this, so that there is a quarter inch between the bars.
etc.
Measure from the lowest to the highest natural. The length of the board is the distance between the lowest and the highest naturals, plus five inches or so. The width, we can assume as twice the length of the longest bar, plus five inches or so. It can be about half an inch thick.
Drill two holes through each bar, one at each end, about a half an inch from the ends. If you split a bar, make and tune another identical one.
Place a piece of foam over the board, completely covering the board. Staple it down at the corners, after making sure that it is moderately taught, but not as much as to rip it.
Place the naturals on the board as you placed them on the ground earlier. Make sure the ends closest to the player are aligned. The aligned ends must be about one inch or so from the long edge of the board. After ensuring that they are all of equal distance from each other, drive nails through the two holes in the bars that you drilled earlier, as to keep the bars from moving except up and down.
Place the sharps and flats as you would see on a piano, between the ends of the two naturals. Let the near ends of the sharps and flats be a half inch from the far end of the naturals. When they are in position, nail them in place.
On the topic of mallets, you really should have two types so you can preform both aggressive toned and milder music. For the hard mallets, you can use plain wooden sticks (dowels). For soft sticks, wind rubber bands or highly compressed layers of felt around a plain drumstick. You should make 4 of each kind if you are serious about the orchestral and chamber repertoire. Otherwise, two will suffice.
On the subject of tuning:
Making the bar shorter will raise the pitch. At first, cut each bar about a fifth higher than desired. Then, smack in the center of the back of the bar, make a gouge, which will lower the pitch. This will improve the tone, especially in the lowest register.
You'll need a glass cutter: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_cutter
Cut one sample bar out of the glass, typically, the one you'd like to be the lowest note or beginning of an octave, if you want an untuned instrument.
Accurately measure the width and length of this bar. When you cut your other bars, make them the same width as your first sample bar. To determine what the lengths of your other bars will be, use this xylophone bar length calculator: http://www.windworld.com/tools/freebar/index.html . You'll need input how many tone you'll want per octave. Typically this will be 12 ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromatic_scale ) if you also want the accidental notes ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accidental_(music) ).
After bars are cut, you'll need to place them onto a body that allows good resonance of the bars, to maximize volume. Thin ropes are a good platform to lay them on. Make sure the bars won't slip and fall off, and you should be relatively ready to play. Use mallets that won't break the bars.
You can make a xylophone by mounting strips of wood upon any sort of frame. The mounting must be "free", in order to allow each note (strip of wood) to vibrate freely. If each strip bears loose washers/nuts below and above, it should be able to vibrate freely.
Tuning a xylophone is not easy! Once you have filed the note A to produce the exact pitch of A 440 Hz, each semitone above requires multiplication by the "twelfth root of two" to the preceding frequency. (The twelfth root of 2 = 1.059463094...). Therefore A# is tuned as 440 times the twelfth root of root, or 466.1637615... Hz. An electronic tuner would be handy!
Be careful not to cut the wood of each note too small! It is more difficult to lower a pitch by adding to the wood's mass, than to raise it, by filing!
Good luck!
You strike the various keys (made from wood or metal) that are laid out on a frame (like the keys on a piano) with two sticks that have a wooden ball on the end. This produces a note whose pitch depends on which key is struck.
I have something in my mind telling me to say vibrations. Every piece of sound in existence has something to do with vibrations.
it is made out of wood
Musical instruments that start with x:xylophone
Mallets are used for the xylophone. I myself own one and you can get mallets most likely at your local music store (or order off the internet.) Do NOT use drumsticks. Those are made for drums. Not a xylophone.
A xylophone is a musical insrtument.
A xylophone is a type of percussion instrument made of hardwood or metal bars that are tuned to specific notes.
The xylophone is a percussion instrument
no the xylophone was only made in Asia
# # # # # #
It depends what the Xylophone is made out of but the noes are short in duration.
The xylophone is a percussion instrument made of steel. The number of bars can vary based on how many octaves the particular xylophone has.
The xylophone originated in Southeast Asia, then made its way to Africa. The earliest known record of the instrument appears in the 9th Century.
There have indeed been changes made on the xylophone to improve it over the years. The keys for example were rearranged.
He used to drive me made by playing the xylophone in bed until the early hours of the morning.
The xylophone is a percussion instrument with bars made of wood. It is similar to the marimba and the glockenspiel (bells).
Rosewood.
BOB
Xylophone stands have been known to be made from several different materials. Some of these materials can include steel tubing, wood, and cheap plastic.
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