Topic: The effect of having differing string lengths within unisons?
I'm still trying to wrap my head around Bechstein's intentional use of differing string lengths in a unison, so that the two or three strings each have a different inharmonicity. I'm not finding much information about the subject.
This exchange on the Piano World Forum says that besides Bechsteins, older Baldwins and at least one Steinway D have a similar arrangement: http://forum.pianoworld.com/ubbthreads....655/3.html . Oleg says in that exhange that one effect is to allow tuning wider octaves. To increase the stretch, in other words. On the other hand, David Pinnegar gets lovely results using Bechsteins tuned to precise or slightly raised octaves--tuning to the fundamental, if I understand correctly, or to 2:1.
But my thoughts start going in circles when I try to imagine the effect on coupling, the decay, the phasing of each partial, and the effect that a slight, realistic variation in attack time on the strings would make when a hammer isn't entirely true or grooves form at unequal rates. And each change in tension will move some partials in the pair or trio in and out of tune, so to speak, with each other. Seems to be something that could offer enormous possibilities in shaping the sound, along with enormous headaches in trying to predict and control the results with a tuning hammer.
(But at least we're one step closer to modeling an older Baldwin, now. We know one of its features!)