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Mute for Generation

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 8:34 am
by sbhikes
I normally stick a paperclip in the fipple on my Acorn whistle, but a paperclip doesn't fit in my Generation. I bought that sticky tack stuff that is recommended but I wonder if I bought the right stuff?

It's like sticky plastic but it's not moldable or shapable like clay as I expected. So even though I cut off a square and can squish and squeeze it, it always springs back to a little square. I am having trouble getting the right size that mutes without cutting off all sound or totally warping some of the notes, or falling into (or out of) the fipple.

Is this the right stuff or did I get the wrong stuff? I bought it at Staples and it was their own Staples brand they didn't have any other.

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 8:41 am
by fearfaoin
Doesn't sound right... Try target or walmart. There is the
"Sticky Tack" brand (which is blue), and I've found an
Elmers brand version which works. Look near the crayons.

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 10:17 am
by Lyn D
It sounds like you got little foam squares. :-] I think I got mine at Walmart. This one is made by Super Glue, is yellow and is called HandiTak. you could check the picture hanging section and the stationary dept. Good luck.

Lyn

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 12:34 pm
by BoneQuint
<img align=left src=http://whistle.jeffleff.com/graphics/TapeMute.jpg>I use a bit of electrical tape dangling into the window, as I've illustrated here. Other kinds of tape work too, but electrical tape can be reused pretty often and doesn't tend to leave much residue. I think this works better than blocking part of the window with tape or putty or whatever. Covering around half or a bit less works well on most whistles, if you block too much, the sound breaks up.

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 1:40 pm
by sbhikes
Well, tape does work, but it seems to make the whistle go flat. Not that I ever tested to see if a paperclip makes it go flat, but it did not seem to as far as I could tell (I've lost my paperclip so I can't test it now -- need to buy some more paperclips.)

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 1:56 pm
by Stan
Use a small rubber band and double/triple/whatever it
and slip it down over the mouthpiece towards the bottom
of the window. Then just squeegy it up and start to
cover the bottom part of the window until you get the
volume you want.

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 2:12 pm
by Lyn D
After I saw BoneQuint's picture, I'm wondering if we're talking about the same thing. I don't put the Handitak over the window. I put it down under the windway, in that (what I call) dead space in the fipple. This way, with that back space filled with the tack, all your breath is directed forward, toward the tone holes. I have it in my Feadog and the sound is better.

Lyn

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 2:49 pm
by MTGuru
Yep, you want the putty not the plastic squares. I got mine at Staples, "Duck" brand blue Poster Putty. As I remember, it was located in the aisle near the adhesive tape and Post-Its.

But I'm surprised about the paper clip. Here's a photo of my Generation D with a standard small gem-type paper clip in the window. It fits and works fine.

Image
Stan wrote:Use a small rubber band ...
That works, too, but may destabilize the tone. The paper clip just mutes without making the whistle more skittish.
Lyn D wrote:After I saw BoneQuint's picture, I'm wondering if we're talking about the same thing.
Diane's not talking about the the "putty tweak". She's just muting the whistle for quiet practice. A bit of putty on the ramp/blade can act as a mute, too.

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 4:08 pm
by cavefish
MTGuru wrote:Yep, you want the putty not the plastic squares. I got mine at Staples, "Duck" brand blue Poster Putty. As I remember, it was located in the aisle near the adhesive tape and Post-Its.

But I'm surprised about the paper clip. Here's a photo of my Generation D with a standard small gem-type paper clip in the window. It fits and works fine.

Image
Stan wrote:Use a small rubber band ...
That works, too, but may destabilize the tone. The paper clip just mutes without making the whistle more skittish.
Lyn D wrote:After I saw BoneQuint's picture, I'm wondering if we're talking about the same thing.
Diane's not talking about the the "putty tweak". She's just muting the whistle for quiet practice. A bit of putty on the ramp/blade can act as a mute, too.
i hope your joking --you actually play like this :boggle:

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 4:09 pm
by cavefish
Lyn D wrote:After I saw BoneQuint's picture, I'm wondering if we're talking about the same thing. I don't put the Handitak over the window. I put it down under the windway, in that (what I call) dead space in the fipple. This way, with that back space filled with the tack, all your breath is directed forward, toward the tone holes. I have it in my Feadog and the sound is better.

Lyn
this is what i did with my Gen Bb but i used wax

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 5:16 pm
by sbhikes
Doesn't the paperclip just fall right out like that? I actually drop it down the fipple on my other whistle. I like the paperclip. If I drop it in large-end-first it mutes the sound quite a bit. Narrow-end-first softens the tone and gives it a breathy sound which I like. But alas, it doesn't fit the Generation.

I gave the rubber band a try. It's hard to get it to mute the whistle without cutting off all the sound.

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 5:38 pm
by MTGuru
sbhikes wrote:Doesn't the paperclip just fall right out like that?
Nope ... it's gently wedged in there, but not enough to damage the blade. I can even turn the whistle upside-down and the clip stays put. I still don't understand why yours doesn't fit, but maybe you're using a different type of clip?

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 5:56 pm
by sbhikes
Mine doesn't fit because I wasn't sticking it in the same hole yours is stuck in. I was sticking it down the top.

But I just found an old paperclip in the junk room that is quite thin and it fits in the fipple with about 3/8 inch sticking up the top. Annoying but not dreadfully so. That seems to do the trick. Sticking it in the windway didn't quiet it much.

I don't know why but I just can't stand the sound of my whistles. The high D is too high and hurts my ears. The Generation Bb tends to honk and make goose-like noises. The paperclip seems to soften both and make them tolerable. Plus it lets me blow harder. Whistles don't take enough air and I end up with too much air in my lungs I have to figure out how to get rid of.

I'm just a flute player, I guess. I just play the whistle to have something portable or to practice when my face starts getting tired.

Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 6:32 pm
by crookedtune
sbhikes wrote:I don't know why but I just can't stand the sound of my whistles. The high D is too high and hurts my ears. The Generation Bb tends to honk and make goose-like noises.
Don't despair! It truly, truly, truly just takes time to get some control, and you'll learn to make it sound sweet and lovely. While we'll always have differences here over expensive vs. midrange vs. cheapies, almost everyone agrees that at least 90% of the sound comes from the player, and not the whistle. They can all sound good.

You'll get there if you don't give up!

Posted: Fri Jul 13, 2007 1:27 pm
by A-Musing
Diane...
High-pitched tones hurt your ears?
Got a lotta extra air in your lungs?
Tired of looking for the right size paperclip?

I humbly suggest trying a low whistle.
Mellow tones.
No paperclip.
No surplus air.

Cheers.