The last few entries have been catching up with things that have happened over the last 3 months.
Fast forward to the present day and it is May 6, 2011 - exactly 9 months since the harpsichord kit arrived on August 6 last year and I am going to declare it "finished" - for now at least ...
Overall I am very pleased with the instrument - the back 8' has a nice warm, clear, singing character to it and is, I think, already very close to where it should be - the front 8' is a little more incisive and, when played on it's own, the top octave is perhaps a little brittle - it will probably need more work but right now it just needs to be played for a while. The two voices combined blend very well together and produce a very satisfying effect.
Tuning appears to be quite stable with the caveat that this instrument does appear to be very sensitive to changes in humidity - much more so than the French double that is in the same room only a few feet away - a change of 5% relative humidity can shift the pitch of the Neapolitan by 15 cents while the double hardly seems to notice - even when this happens the instrument does stay pretty much in tune with itself and if you don't mind leaving it slightly sharp or flat you can get away with only touching up a few notes - on the other hand it is an extremely easy instrument to tune and a complete tuning doesn't take more than 15 or 20 minutes.
At the outset I did intend to keep track of exactly how much time I spent working on the instrument but I completely failed to do that. The one thing that I do know is that I spent at least as much time planing and thinking about the best way to do things as I spent actually working hands-on during the construction phase which lasted almost exactly 6 months. The last 3 months were all taken up with voicing and just playing the instrument. Construction could certainly have been done in much less than 6 months elapsed time - I had originally estimated about 4 months but I had some other commitments that took up more of my time than I had expected.
Anyway, here it is, alongside its larger and older cousin ...
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