84,99 zł
Long before the invention of microchips or electrical wiring, medieval engineers built massive, complex analog computers out of wood and leather. The traditional pipe organ, utilizing mechanical "tracker action," is a staggering feat of architectural and acoustic engineering. When an organist presses a key, they are not triggering an electronic sensor. They are physically pulling a complex, highly tensioned web of thin wooden strips (trackers), rollers, and levers that manually open a specific wind valve thirty feet away, releasing pressurized air into a massive brass pipe. This book dissects the friction-defying physics required to make this mechanical linkage feel light and responsive to the musician's fingers. We explore the intricate joinery, the climate-sensitive materials, and the immense spatial logic required to route thousands of intersecting wooden trackers through the tight confines of a soaring cathedral loft without a single piece binding or jamming. Appreciate the ultimate mechanical instrument. A detailed look at the sweeping wooden circuitry that converts human touch into thunderous acoustic power.
Ebooka przeczytasz w aplikacjach Legimi lub dowolnej aplikacji obsługującej format:
Liczba stron: 223
Rok wydania: 2026
