NEW-TYPE NATIVE AMERICAN FLUTE
20170243569 ยท 2017-08-24
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
Disclosed is a new-type native American flute with a new finger hole design. One end of a flute head is provided with a mouthpiece, and the other end of the flute head is connected with a flute body. The front of the flute head is provided with a flute nose and a sound outlet. The flute body is provided with 7-10 finger holes. The finger holes may include main finger holes and an auxiliary finger hole, and the auxiliary finger hole is on the side of the main finger holes. The main finger holes include front main finger holes and a back main finger hole. Arranging an auxiliary finger hole on the surface of a native American flute in the present disclosure may broaden the range, increase altered tones as well, and further realize fine tuning for the altered tones.
Claims
1. A new-type native American flute comprising a flute head and a flute body, one end of the flute head being provided with a mouthpiece, the other end of the flute head being connected with the flute body, the front of the flute head being provided with a flute nose and a sound outlet, and the centerline of the flute nose and the centerline of the sound outlet being on the same line, characterized in that the flute body is provided with 7-10 finger holes.
2. The new-type native American flute of claim 1, wherein the finger holes include main finger holes and an auxiliary finger hole, the auxiliary finger hole being on the side of the main finger holes, the main finger holes including front main finger holes and a back main finger hole.
3. The new-type native American flute of claim 2, wherein the centerline of the front main finger holes and the centerline of the sound outlet are on the same line, and the centerline of the back main finger hole and the centerline of the front main finger holes are symmetrical along the axis of the flute body.
4. The new-type native American flute of claim 3, wherein the back main finger hole is a thumb finger hole.
5. The new-type native American flute of claim 2, wherein the front main finger holes comprise, in order, a left index finger hole, a left middle finger hole, a left ring finger hole, a right index finger hole, a right middle finger hole and a right ring finger hole, or a right index finger hole, a right middle finger hole, a right ring finger, a left index finger hole, a left middle finger hole and a left ring finger hole along the direction from the flute head to the flute body.
6. The new-type native American flute of claim 5, wherein when the main finger hole provided at the end of the front main finger holes is a right ring finger hole, the auxiliary finger hole is a right little auxiliary finger hole located on the right side of the right ring finger hole; and when the main finger hole located at the end of the front main finger holes is a left ring finger hole, the auxiliary finger hole is a left little auxiliary finger hole located on the left side of the left ring finger hole.
7. The new-type native American flute of claim 1, wherein one end of the flute head connected to the flute body is a pipe orifice, the flute body being provided therein with a flute separator to form an air chamber between the mouthpiece and the flute separator and form a pipe chamber between the pipe orifice and the flute separator, the inner diameter of the pipe chamber being of an approximate horn shape, and the inner diameter of the pipe chamber near the flute separator being greater than the that of the pipe orifice.
8. The new-type native American flute of claim 7, wherein the air chamber is provided with an air chamber outlet, the pipe chamber is provided with a sound hole, and the bottom of the flute nose is provided with an air drain, the air drain being located outside the air chamber outlet, and the air drain extending to the outside of the sound hole so as to draw the airflow in the air chamber into the sound hole via the flute nose.
9. The new-type native American flute of claim 8, wherein the flute nose includes an upper portion and a hard plastic base, the air drain being located on the bottom of the hard plastic base, the surface of the flute body being provided with a nasal groove, both the air chamber outlet and the sound hole being provided in the nasal groove, and the hard plastic base being fixed on the nasal groove by gluing.
10. The new-type native American flute of claim 8, wherein the top of the air chamber outlet is flush with the top of the sound hole, the air chamber outlet being rectangular, and its lengthwise direction being consistent with the lengthwise direction of the flute body; and the sound hole being rectangular, and its lengthwise direction being perpendicular to the lengthwise direction of the flute body.
11. The new-type native American flute of claim 4, wherein the front main finger holes are, in order, a left index finger hole, a left middle finger hole, a left ring finger hole, a right index finger hole, a right middle finger hole and a right ring finger hole, or a right index finger hole, a right middle finger hole, a right ring finger, a left index finger hole, a left middle finger hole and a left ring finger hole along the direction from the flute head to the flute body.
12. The new-type native American flute of claim 11, wherein when the main finger hole provided at the end of the front main finger holes is a right ring finger hole, the auxiliary finger hole is a right little auxiliary finger hole located on the right side of the right ring finger hole; and when the main finger hole located at the end of the front main finger holes is a left ring finger hole, the auxiliary finger hole is a left little auxiliary finger hole located on the left side of the left ring finger hole.
13. The new-type native American flute of claim 2, wherein one end of the flute head connected to the flute body is a pipe orifice, the flute body being provided therein with a flute separator to form an air chamber between the mouthpiece and the flute separator and form a pipe chamber between the pipe orifice and the flute separator, the inner diameter of the pipe chamber being of an approximate horn shape, and the inner diameter of the pipe chamber near the flute separator being greater than the that of the pipe orifice.
14. The new-type native American flute of claim 4, wherein one end of the flute head connected to the flute body is a pipe orifice, the flute body being provided therein with a flute separator to form an air chamber between the mouthpiece and the flute separator and form a pipe chamber between the pipe orifice and the flute separator, the inner diameter of the pipe chamber being of an approximate horn shape, and the inner diameter of the pipe chamber near the flute separator being greater than the that of the pipe orifice.
15. The new-type native American flute of claim 6, wherein one end of the flute head connected to the flute body is a pipe orifice, the flute body being provided therein with a flute separator to form an air chamber between the mouthpiece and the flute separator and form a pipe chamber between the pipe orifice and the flute separator, the inner diameter of the pipe chamber being of an approximate horn shape, and the inner diameter of the pipe chamber near the flute separator being greater than the that of the pipe orifice.
16. The new-type native American flute of claim 12, wherein one end of the flute head connected to the flute body is a pipe orifice, the flute body being provided therein with a flute separator to form an air chamber between the mouthpiece and the flute separator and form a pipe chamber between the pipe orifice and the flute separator, the inner diameter of the pipe chamber being of an approximate horn shape, and the inner diameter of the pipe chamber near the flute separator being greater than the that of the pipe orifice.
17. The new-type native American flute of claim 13, wherein the air chamber is provided with an air chamber outlet, the pipe chamber is provided with a sound hole, and the bottom of the flute nose is provided with an air drain, the air drain being located outside the air chamber outlet, and the air drain extending to the outside of the sound hole so as to draw the airflow in the air chamber into the sound hole via the flute nose.
18. The new-type native American flute of claim 17, wherein the flute nose includes an upper portion and a hard plastic base, the air drain being located on the bottom of the hard plastic base, the surface of the flute body being provided with a nasal groove, both the air chamber outlet and the sound hole being provided in the nasal groove, and the hard plastic base being fixed on the nasal groove by gluing.
19. The new-type native American flute of claim 18, wherein the top of the air chamber outlet is flush with the top of the sound hole, the air chamber outlet being rectangular, and its lengthwise direction being consistent with the lengthwise direction of the flute body; and the sound hole being rectangular, and its lengthwise direction being perpendicular to the lengthwise direction of the flute body.
20. The new-type native American flute of claim 9, wherein the top of the air chamber outlet is flush with the top of the sound hole, the air chamber outlet being rectangular, and its lengthwise direction being consistent with the lengthwise direction of the flute body; and the sound hole being rectangular, and its lengthwise direction being perpendicular to the lengthwise direction of the flute body.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0015] In order to more clearly illustrate the technical solutions in the embodiments of the present invention or in the prior art, drawings to be used in the description of the embodiments or the prior art will be briefly introduced in the following. Apparently, the drawings in the following description are merely some embodiments of the present invention, and other drawings can be obtained by those skilled in the art based on these drawings without any inventive efforts.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0020] The following will clearly and completely describe the technical solutions of the disclosure with reference to the drawings. Obviously, the described embodiments are merely part of the embodiments of the disclosure, and do not encompass all possible embodiments. Based on the description provided in the disclosure, other embodiments obtained by those skilled in the art without any inventive efforts fall within the scope of the disclosure.
[0021] In an embodiment of the present disclosure, a new-type native American flute is provided. As shown in
[0022] The flute body 2 is cylindrical with the same size of inner and outer diameters as the flute head 1. The flute head 1 and the flute body 2 can be made of wood, plastic, bamboo and other materials. The flute head 1 and the flute body 2 can be produced in an integrated molding way or through connection after being machined in segments. The connection can be realized with adhesion, thread, etc. The flute body 2 is provided with a row of main finger holes, including front main finger holes and a back main finger hole. The main finger holes comprise, in order, a left index finger hole 21, a left middle finger hole 22, a left ring finger hole 23, a right index finger hole 24, a right middle finger hole 25 and a right ring finger hole 26 along the direction from the flute head 1 to the flute body 2. The centerline of the front main finger holes and the centerline of the sound outlet 14 are overlapped. Providing an auxiliary finger hole on the side of the main finger holes can not only broaden the range, but also increase altered tones so as to make a fine tune on the temperament. The auxiliary finger hole is an auxiliary finger hole 28 for right little finger located on the right side of the right ring finger hole 26. The back main finger hole is a left thumb finger hole 27. The left thumb finger hole 27 is closer to the mouthpiece 13 than the left index finger hole 21. The centerline of the left thumb finger hole 27 and the centerline of the front main finger holes are symmetrical with each other along the axis of the flute body 2. Such an arrangement of finger holes can fit for the fingering habit of music lovers, and make the playing in this embodiment less difficult while better music fluency can be obtained.
[0023] Referring to
[0024] The mouthpiece 13 is connected to the air chamber 100 through an inlet passage. On top of the air chamber 100 is arranged an air chamber outlet 101. The air chamber outlet 101 is rectangular, and its lengthwise direction is consistent with the lengthwise direction of the flute body 1. On top of the air chamber 100 is arranged a sound hole 14. The sound hole 14 is rectangular, and its lengthwise direction is perpendicular to the lengthwise direction of the flute body 1. The centerline of the sound hole 14 and the centerline of the air chamber outlet 101 are on the same line. The air chamber outlet 101 is closer to the mouthpiece 13 than the sound hole 14. The side wall of the air chamber outlet 101 near the sound hole 14 is a slope 1010, so that the airflow in the air chamber 10 may rise along the slope 1010.
[0025] In order to make the rising airflow horizontally flow into the sound hole 14 from the air chamber outlet 101 to effectively control the scale during playing, the top of the air chamber outlet 101 is flush with the top of the sound hole 14. As shown in
[0026] In an embodiment, the surface of the flute head is provided with a nasal groove 153 in order to facilitate the fixing of the flute nose 15 on the surface of the flute body 1. The bottom of the nasal groove 153 is a plane. Both the air chamber outlet 101 and the sound hole 14 locate in the nasal groove 153. The bottom of the flute nose 15 is a plane in order to fix the bottom of the flute nose 15 on the nasal groove 153.
[0027] Finally, it should be noted that, the above embodiments are provided to describe the technical solutions of the disclosure, but are not intended as a limitation. Although the disclosure has been described in detail with reference to the embodiments, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the technical solutions described in the foregoing various embodiments can still be modified, or some technical features therein can be equivalently replaced. Such modifications or replacements do not make the essence of corresponding technical solutions depart from the spirit and scope of technical solutions embodiments of the disclosure. As a result, the protection scope of the present invention shall be subject to the protection range of the claim.