Metal organ pipes are made of various proportions of lead and tin. These metals are used because they are easily manipulated both in the manufacturing process and during the voicing process where minute changes are made to the sound producing portions of the pipes. The proportion of metals depends on the sound the organ builder is trying to achieve. Tin is lighter and stiffer than lead. Therefore it will result in a more harmonically rich tone. Pipes that produce intense tones with fewer harmonics are often made of almost pure lead. Larger pipes will collapse under their own weight if made of a lead / tin alloy. Pure tin was used for larger pipes in European organs because of the availability of readily available tin deposits, particularly in England. It will also take a high polish giving the gleaming silver pipes that are typical of European organ facades. Zinc is commonly used for large pipes as it is less expensive than tin and more plentiful in North America and other areas.
they made pipes
wood or reeds
At the time of the Roman Empire, the Romans used pipes made of lead, because it is a cheap metal that is easily worked into pipes, and which unlike iron doesn't rust. The Romans didn't worry about lead poisoning. Lead pipes continued to be used even into the mid 20th century, before we became more concerned about the danger of lead poisoning.
Pan was the god of nature and wildlife so he was responsible of looking after nature and wildlife and he made the reed pipes.
That was the best material they had.
They were made out of tin.
Maybe with pipes and little bit of wood
The keyboard instrument with pipes would be the humble pipe organ.
it is the anne's organ
it is the anne's organ
There is no limit to the number of pipes that an organ may have. The only factors that may pose a limitation are space and funding. The organ with the largest number of pipes is in Boardwalk Hall Atlantic City, NJ. It has 33,114 pipes.
Organ Pipes is a National Park in VIctoria (Australia), 23 km northwest of Melbourne. Scroll down to related links and look at "Organ Pipes National Park - Wikipedia".
There are organ pipes.
As the vast majority of pipe organs are custom designed there is no one, definitive answer. A small, hand pumped, table top organ ("or Portative") might have as few as 25 pipes - or two octaves. The common, medium sized church organ averages around 1,000 pipes. Large organs can have upwards of 10,000 pipes. The two largest, the Wanamaker Organ and the Atlantic City Convention Hall Organ have 28,543 pipes and 33,114 pipes respectively.
I assume you are referring to the Las Piñas Bamboo Organ. What was done to make the bamboo strong enough? Nothing. Organ pipes don't have to be very strong; just strong enough to stand upright and bear their own weight. The fact that they are producing a tone puts no extra stress on them. Other than this organ, bamboo has not been used for organ pipes except for a few small, novelty organs.
The organ's stop controls the flow of the air into the pipes.
in your mom