Jim Feeley Posted January 18, 2022 Report Posted January 18, 2022 I want to be ahead of the rush... From a local news site: ‘Granny chic’: Are San Francisco Victorian speaking tubes making a comeback? [snip] “Why are we able to hear a great distance through a speaking tube?” the snippet reads before explaining the science: “When we speak into a tube, the sound waves cannot scatter, but must travel within the tube, and so we can hear at a much greater distance.” Relics of the speaking tube can still be found in old houses, including some of the many Victorians around San Francisco. In some cases, the tube has been removed, leaving a curious small hole in the wall where it once protruded. [rest of the article at link above]
Philip Perkins Posted January 18, 2022 Report Posted January 18, 2022 I have a pair of tin cans and a string you can have!
Peter Mega Posted January 18, 2022 Report Posted January 18, 2022 These tubes can be found in childrens playgrounds in Australia. I’ve come across a few with my son. We talk over long distances. Another interesting place in South Australia is the Whispering Wall dam. Whispering voices can be heard clearly from one side of the dam to the other, 100m away. I’ve seen/heard this for myself a few years back. It’s pretty cool. https://southaustralia.com/products/barossa/attraction/whispering-wall
Allen Rowand Posted January 19, 2022 Report Posted January 19, 2022 Metal pipes? Dude, stone is so much warmer and more natural sounding.
Jim Feeley Posted January 19, 2022 Author Report Posted January 19, 2022 Allen, the metal pipes work well with my portable echo chamber (notice the wheels).
Allen Rowand Posted January 19, 2022 Report Posted January 19, 2022 18 minutes ago, Jim Feeley said: Allen, the metal pipes work well with my portable echo chamber (notice the wheels). Yeah, but rock is so organic sounding… I'm sorry, I'll stop with the audiophile jokes.
Izen Ears Posted January 19, 2022 Report Posted January 19, 2022 12 hours ago, Allen Rowand said: Yeah, but rock is so organic sounding… I'm sorry, I'll stop with the audiophile jokes. But rock has no transparency… Cool thread Jim!! I want some speaking tubes to confuse my cat pals with. I also want an echo chamber. I’m surprised that we didn’t see partitions in there, to make the decay shorter. MAN that space sounds great. I’d love to use that with the surf guitar rig!
Jim Feeley Posted January 19, 2022 Author Report Posted January 19, 2022 My fave new reverb pedal (that I don't own) is the Summer Reverb from Austin Microphones. If you tap/kick it, the digital "springs" crash in a random way. More info: https://www.austinmics.com/delay-reverb-kits/ Watch at least the first 40-seconds of this demo video. Fun...Also sounds decent...
Izen Ears Posted January 19, 2022 Report Posted January 19, 2022 I actually made a reverb crash pedal out of a Surfy Bear classic pedal. I made a wood housing so I can slam it up and down. Setting the dwell to zero and then using the mix as the crash volume makes it non-deafening. Sometimes I just sit there crashing it for 30 - 60 seconds. Haven’t seen that pedal but that’s cool it has a crash. Does it drip??!!!!
Jim Feeley Posted January 20, 2022 Author Report Posted January 20, 2022 Don't know if it drips.... Drop a line to Rick at Austin. He's a surf dude, so he probably at least thought about it. I saw another "digital spring" pedal... The TC Electronic Drip! The Surfy Bear stuff looks cool. Must have been fun to mod...
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