A friend in town asked me if I could do anything with a very old,
small pinned cylinder-operated reed organ owned by the town historical
society. I've rebuilt a number of reed organs and assumed (incorrectly)
that this instrument would be similar.
Re-leathering the bellows and replacing the flap valves for the wind
supply was no problem, but about half of the notes are not playing and
several of the reeds have become brittle with age and are cracked or
broken. I fear all of them are in similar condition.
The reeds appear to be of 0.025-inch brass, thinned down as required
for tuning -- some thinned down to 0.012" to 0.018" over their length
but thicker where they are attached. The rivet that holds the brass
reed in place is relatively soft, seems to be softer than the brass.
The material of the reed bases is a mystery to me. It is non-magnetic
and from the appearance I might have thought lead, but they are much
harder than lead and much lighter. There is light corrosion on the
surface but none of the corrosion or distortion I might have expected
from a typical pot metal part of that age.
The base material could be zinc. The density is about 5 or 6 g/cm^3 to
my (poor) ability to measure the part's volume, so it is a relatively
light metal, probably not inconsistent with pot metal or zinc.
I have found a similar organ by the same maker and the owner was able
to provide me with the scale for his, so assuming they are the same
(not a given, unfortunately) I know what the scale should be.
I haven't had success in getting any help with these from my reed organ
friends, but it occurred to me that they looked very much like accordion
reeds so I thought I should broaden my inquiry in an attempt to find
someone who might be able to make (and tune) replacement brass reeds
for this instrument. Wholesale replacement with more typical reed organ
reeds is not an option, the owners want to maintain originality.
Failing that, if you can point me towards resources that would teach me
how to cut the brass without distorting it I suppose I could have a go
at doing it myself. I'm a pretty proficient woodworker, but I know next
to nothing about working with metal so I'd really like to find someone
who already knows how to do this.
Thanks very much for whatever help you might be able to offer.
Roger Wiegand
Wayland, Massachusetts
[ bottom of broken reed
[ https://www.mmdigest.com/Attachments/21/09/11/210911_095410_IMG_3552.jpeg
[ top of broken reed
[ https://www.mmdigest.com/Attachments/21/09/11/210911_095410_IMG_3553.jpeg
[ view of entire bank of reeds
[ https://www.mmdigest.com/Attachments/21/09/11/210911_095410_IMG_3554.jpeg
|