Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Keyboard: Balance pin holes and rack slots

Keys must be guided in two places to keep them from shifting sideways as they are played. All keyboard frames have a balance rail slightly in front of the midpoint into which balance pins are set. These pass through holes in the keys. The second guide location varies among the various national styles of harpsichords, but a common arrangement for Italian harpsichords is to use a rack at the back of the key frame. A slotted strip of wood standing on edge receives metal pins or wooden slips driven horizontally into the key ends and restricts the keys to up-and-down motion only.

I'm using balance pins of 0.096" diameter and drilling a 3/32" hole to receive them. In order that the holes through the keys line up with the holes in the balance rail, the key panel is simply screwed onto the balance rail, after making sure that the panel is correctly positioned both back-to-front and side-to-side. Drilling holes this way is certain to align them properly, as any slight discrepancy is transferred from one part to the other:


The sharps have their balance pin holes offset to the rear, since their key levers are shorter.

Now for the rack itself. It must fit under the wrestplank so that the keyboard can be installed and removed freely. The key ends pivot in small arcs when played, so the rack can't be right up against back of the keyboard, nor can rack be much thicker than the upper belly rail or the back row of jacks might rub against it. These parameters determine the height and thickness of the board that will become the rack.

I'll be using 1.5 mm pins in the backs of the keys, so I want the rack slots to be 1.6 mm wide. This provides a minimal bit of clearance that avoids having the pins scrape up and down in slots that are too tight. The old makers made their rack slots with a dovetail profile so that the pins wouldn't jam inside the slots, the idea being to guide the pins with as small a contact surface as possible. Another way to accomplish this is to drill a bunch of oversize holes just shy of the front face of the rack:


These 3/16" holes were located by temporarily clamping the rack piece to the key frame and putting tick marks along the face at the midpoints of the key ends. The holes are drilled about 1 mm from the edge.

Next, the actual slots were routed with a 1.6 mm router bit and the table tilted at 8 degrees. No ordinary router table is capable of tilting, but the Shopsmith I'm using can do so, luckily for me. The slots must be angled because the back of the keyboard isn't square to the sides.

Once the slots were routed and residual fuzz cleaned up, the rack was glued to the back of the key frame:


Here it is with the glue dry and 2 screws (not seen) securing the left and right ends to the key frame:


Note that I've already glued the decorative maple arcades onto the key fronts. These are a little wider than necessary so that when the keys are cut apart the arcades will be trimmed flush with the sides of each key.

Lastly I have to transfer the exact locations of each rack slot back onto the rear edges of the keys so that the drill holes for the rack pins will let each pin enter the appropriate slot straight on.

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