Matthew o Casey Posted February 19, 2021 Share Posted February 19, 2021 I have the reeds from a hohner black dot double ray, is it possible to use these to create a different layout for a concertina ( Anglo) 30 button , please forgive my ignorance. I would like to build my own . Any help would be most grateful. thank you Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pistachio Dreamer Posted February 20, 2021 Share Posted February 20, 2021 Hi Matthew, You could certainly use most of the C row, but after that things get difficult. A few of the B row reeds work in the accidental row, beyond that you will either need to find other reeds (a single G-row hohner perhaps?) and/or retune reeds that are closest to where you want them to be. You can also use the bass harmonising reeds to help, though sometimes these are made in a way that they speak a little quieter than the RH reed blocks. As an example, you will need to repurpose a reed for the bottom C/G reed of the concertina, which doesn't turn up on a melodeon. I do this in one of two ways. For a short scale application I find a reed tuned to upper G, and drop one side using solder to the C. If I want a long scale instrument with a powerful sound, I find a weighted base reed at the lower C and remove the weight on one side to get up to the G. Good luck with your experiments! Paul. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stephen Chambers Posted February 20, 2021 Share Posted February 20, 2021 2 hours ago, Pistachio Dreamer said: ... you will either need to find other reeds (a single G-row hohner perhaps?) You'd need the G-row reeds of D/G Hohner to get them in the right octave, or the piccolo reeds of a 4-stop melodeon - both single-row G, and 2-row G/C, button boxes are pitched an octave too low. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matthew o Casey Posted February 20, 2021 Author Share Posted February 20, 2021 4 hours ago, Pistachio Dreamer said: Hi Matthew, You could certainly use most of the C row, but after that things get difficult. A few of the B row reeds work in the accidental row, beyond that you will either need to find other reeds (a single G-row hohner perhaps?) and/or retune reeds that are closest to where you want them to be. You can also use the bass harmonising reeds to help, though sometimes these are made in a way that they speak a little quieter than the RH reed blocks. As an example, you will need to repurpose a reed for the bottom C/G reed of the concertina, which doesn't turn up on a melodeon. I do this in one of two ways. For a short scale application I find a reed tuned to upper G, and drop one side using solder to the C. If I want a long scale instrument with a powerful sound, I find a weighted base reed at the lower C and remove the weight on one side to get up to the G. Good luck with your experiments! Paul. Thank you Paul Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matthew o Casey Posted February 20, 2021 Author Share Posted February 20, 2021 1 hour ago, Stephen Chambers said: You'd need the G-row reeds of D/G Hohner to get them in the right octave, or the piccolo reeds of a 4-stop melodeon - both single-row G, and 2-row G/C, button boxes are pitched an octave too low. Thank you Stephen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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