Mark rober rush e9/25/2023 ![]() So how do we do that? Well, bartolomeo got real, clever and added a little extra hardware here. However, you'll notice we're still damping the string and, as you can see, the piano should continue making sound, even if i'm holding the key down. The second problem is, this is an upright piano, so the strings must be vertical to fit, but that's an easy enough fix if we shift them here and add an extra hinge point. In fact, you can see that's exactly the problem with this toy piano. It sounds great until you touch the strings and now because it can't vibrate, you don't hear anything. That means the string isn't free to wiggle and vibrate, which is how the sound is created like with this guitar. The first is that the hammer remains in contact with the string when you hold the key down. ![]() Why can't you just have a class one lever where, when i push down here, there's a full crimp in the middle and it hits the string here well, it turns out there's two problems with that right off the bat. I mean the first piano i ever played was pretty dang simple like. Now, if you're thinking like an engineer, you know the best design is always the one that gets the job done in the most simple way possible, and when i first saw this no offense to bartolome christofori, the inventor of the piano, it just seemed overly complicated. In fact, if you zoom in and just isolate on a single key, this is what's happening every time you push down on the white part. This song has never been played with an actual real-life piano, so i've legitimately got a couple fire extinguishers on hand in case the whole thing goes up in flames, but before we get to any of that, we need to first understand the really cool engineering behind how Pianos even work, because if you look at the guts of this modified see-through piano for something that was invented by an italian dude 300 years ago, you can see it's pretty complicated. Remember for my videos that song usually comes a little bit later.Īnyways then, he's gon na attempt to play the world's most complicated digital piano song from sheet music boss rush e there's a reason. So today, not only will we talk about the science behind making a piano speak human, but later he's gon na play the drums for us and sing for us not yet chopsticks. So in addition to talking, he could play simple songs like that, but also like really complicated songs. This is a talking piano and it's so cool and his name is chopsticks. I took some creative liberty in the form of a smoke bomb □ No Chopstix were hurt in the filming of this video (i.e. ![]() If you want more info, you can find it here. We had to modify it so it could play Rush E and all the keys at once otherwise out of the box they can play about 30 keys at once. He the best explainer of complicated stuff I know (the buttery smooth delivery certainly doesn’t hurt)- įinally, the piano in the video is from Edelweiss. Go check out and sub to their channel!- Īlso go check out Grant from 3Blue1Brown. The first 2000 people will get 20% off their annual premium membership. Oh, the robot piano can also speak English.
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