Topic: Strings of varying thickness, lengthwise, to create stronger IH
From the VI Control site: Someone has created software code in Mathematica for, written a paper about, and strung a piano, using strings that have been, in sections, manually unwound, disturbing the normal partial ladder of each note. Not in just a chaotic way, but with the desire to create specific sounds, some of which are interesting. Note that there are 2 videos here. The second is the better one:
https://vi-control.net/community/thread...ano.68551/
Makes me wonder if, perhaps not long ago, there might have been more variation in the thickness of strings when they were hand-wound. Could some of the personality of old pianos arise from subtle, accidental thickness variations, less extreme than what these chaps are creating?
Here is the link to their site, where there are more sound examples, and the Mathematica "notebooks" for experimenting: http://sethares.engr.wisc.edu/papers/hyperOctave.html
Of course, having strings with wide IH is nothing new. Calculating the wide IH by varying the string width seems to be the thing that may be of some interest for modelling sounds.