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		<title><![CDATA[Modartt user forum - Metallic rattle on some Steinway D NY notes: bug or feature?]]></title>
		<link>https://forum.modartt.com/viewtopic.php?id=12686</link>
		<description><![CDATA[The most recent posts in Metallic rattle on some Steinway D NY notes: bug or feature?.]]></description>
		<lastBuildDate>Mon, 20 Oct 2025 12:47:49 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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			<title><![CDATA[Re: Metallic rattle on some Steinway D NY notes: bug or feature?]]></title>
			<link>https://forum.modartt.com/viewtopic.php?pid=1004381#p1004381</link>
			<description><![CDATA[<div class="quotebox"><cite>daniel_r328 wrote:</cite><blockquote><div class="quotebox"><cite>Philippe Guillaume wrote:</cite><blockquote><p>That may come from the duplex scale (which is indeed quite present at fff), have a try reducing it.</p></blockquote></div><p>Thanks! I&#039;ve used this as a starting point to dig deeper:</p><p>Setting sympathetic resonance and duplex to zero, reduce the general shimmer of the note a bit, but the specific effect I hear is still there. However, Setting the impedance slope to a flat (0.2) value and shortening the string length to its minimum strengthens the effect - it&#039;s now auditable as a bell-like sound in all notes but particularly strongly emphasised around A5. So it looks like it&#039;s effectively a hump in the frequency response of the soundboard: the short strings excite a wider range of frequencies and the soundboard emphasises (overemphasises?) some of them. </p><p>This may very well be an accurate reflection of how the reference instrument behaves, so it&#039;s really down to personal preference. It makes me wish for a few more user-accessible parameters for the excellent new soundboard model, though. I&#039;m thinking that something that compresses the peaks and dips of the response curve towards a floating average, could act as a parameter to make the model more neutral-vs-characterful (I&#039;m making a lot of inferences here, I appreciate).</p><p>Anyway, for my needs I should be able to tweak string length and maybe impedance to bring this under control - thank you again <i class="far fa-smile smiley"></i></p></blockquote></div><p>Yes you can proceed as you describe, there&#039;s just one thing I would not change: the string length, as it really provides the signature of the original instrument. Of course if you don&#039;t care about that, then it is not an issue changing it, to another piano hence.</p>]]></description>
			<author><![CDATA[null@example.com (Philippe Guillaume)]]></author>
			<pubDate>Mon, 20 Oct 2025 12:47:49 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://forum.modartt.com/viewtopic.php?pid=1004381#p1004381</guid>
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			<title><![CDATA[Re: Metallic rattle on some Steinway D NY notes: bug or feature?]]></title>
			<link>https://forum.modartt.com/viewtopic.php?pid=1004380#p1004380</link>
			<description><![CDATA[<div class="quotebox"><cite>Philippe Guillaume wrote:</cite><blockquote><p>That may come from the duplex scale (which is indeed quite present at fff), have a try reducing it.</p></blockquote></div><p>Thanks! I&#039;ve used this as a starting point to dig deeper:</p><p>Setting sympathetic resonance and duplex to zero, reduce the general shimmer of the note a bit, but the specific effect I hear is still there. However, Setting the impedance slope to a flat (0.2) value and shortening the string length to its minimum strengthens the effect - it&#039;s now auditable as a bell-like sound in all notes but particularly strongly emphasised around A5. So it looks like it&#039;s effectively a hump in the frequency response of the soundboard: the short strings excite a wider range of frequencies and the soundboard emphasises (overemphasises?) some of them. </p><p>This may very well be an accurate reflection of how the reference instrument behaves, so it&#039;s really down to personal preference. It makes me wish for a few more user-accessible parameters for the excellent new soundboard model, though. I&#039;m thinking that something that compresses the peaks and dips of the response curve towards a floating average, could act as a parameter to make the model more neutral-vs-characterful (I&#039;m making a lot of inferences here, I appreciate).</p><p>Anyway, for my needs I should be able to tweak string length and maybe impedance to bring this under control - thank you again <i class="far fa-smile smiley"></i></p>]]></description>
			<author><![CDATA[null@example.com (daniel_r328)]]></author>
			<pubDate>Mon, 20 Oct 2025 12:34:39 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://forum.modartt.com/viewtopic.php?pid=1004380#p1004380</guid>
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			<title><![CDATA[Re: Metallic rattle on some Steinway D NY notes: bug or feature?]]></title>
			<link>https://forum.modartt.com/viewtopic.php?pid=1004378#p1004378</link>
			<description><![CDATA[<div class="quotebox"><cite>daniel_r328 wrote:</cite><blockquote><p>Good morning Modartt team and community,</p><p>I&#039;ve noticed something in the v9 Steinway D NY that I wanted to get some clarification on. Playing the notes around A5 (aka A&#039;&#039;) at fortissimo, I hear a distinct, separate, dry, metallic rattle at high pitch - similar to what a vibrating string hitting a hard surface would sound like (sounding more like a multi-frequency noise than a clean resonance). I reproduced this on different audio chains and different presets, so am confident that it&#039;s in the model rather than a digital artefact. It&#039;s also present in the HB models (albeit fainter), and absent in the other models I&#039;ve tried.</p><p>To Pianoteq&#039;s credit, this sounds very much like something an acoustic instrument would produce, so I wouldn&#039;t call it a simulation flaw. But I would call it a potentially undesirable characteristic in an acoustic instrument and am curious if it&#039;s intentional, and/or if I can tweak this effect away somehow?</p><p>I&#039;m not clear on what would happen in an acoustic instrument to cause that sound, so unsure which part of the virtual design influences it.</p><p>Grateful for your thoughts!</p></blockquote></div><p>That may come from the duplex scale (which is indeed quite present at fff), have a try reducing it.</p>]]></description>
			<author><![CDATA[null@example.com (Philippe Guillaume)]]></author>
			<pubDate>Mon, 20 Oct 2025 12:00:50 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://forum.modartt.com/viewtopic.php?pid=1004378#p1004378</guid>
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			<title><![CDATA[Metallic rattle on some Steinway D NY notes: bug or feature?]]></title>
			<link>https://forum.modartt.com/viewtopic.php?pid=1004374#p1004374</link>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Good morning Modartt team and community,</p><p>I&#039;ve noticed something in the v9 Steinway D NY that I wanted to get some clarification on. Playing the notes around A5 (aka A&#039;&#039;) at fortissimo, I hear a distinct, separate, dry, metallic rattle at high pitch - similar to what a vibrating string hitting a hard surface would sound like (sounding more like a multi-frequency noise than a clean resonance). I reproduced this on different audio chains and different presets, so am confident that it&#039;s in the model rather than a digital artefact. It&#039;s also present in the HB models (albeit fainter), and absent in the other models I&#039;ve tried.</p><p>To Pianoteq&#039;s credit, this sounds very much like something an acoustic instrument would produce, so I wouldn&#039;t call it a simulation flaw. But I would call it a potentially undesirable characteristic in an acoustic instrument and am curious if it&#039;s intentional, and/or if I can tweak this effect away somehow?</p><p>I&#039;m not clear on what would happen in an acoustic instrument to cause that sound, so unsure which part of the virtual design influences it.</p><p>Grateful for your thoughts!</p>]]></description>
			<author><![CDATA[null@example.com (daniel_r328)]]></author>
			<pubDate>Mon, 20 Oct 2025 09:42:17 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid>https://forum.modartt.com/viewtopic.php?pid=1004374#p1004374</guid>
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