Dear Karl,

Thank you so much for the clarification and it seems at last we have some idea of the density of PVDF and "KF" strings.

Savarez are ahead of all other string manufacturers in using PUL to identify strings. It means you can compare wound strings of various kinds with unwound strings, and unwound strings of different materials. What a pity they have not extended this labelling to the KF strings! They could have saved us a lot of frustration.

I have no idea how the KF "composite" strings (.95mm and upwards) are made but it seems inevitable that if they are a composite of PVDF and something else which is not so dense, the overall density of these strings is going to be slightly lower than that of the plain KF strings (the diameters of .91mm and less).

In any case I have been using these strings successfully for some time and they have allowed me to cease using wound strings on all types of lute, even the really difficult cases like the 10c lute in renaissance tuning, the 13c bass rider, and the liuto attiorbato.

Another point worth noting about these strings is they seem to be almost indestructible, so they are not only relatively cheap to buy, you never need to buy another one!

Best wishes,

Martin

On 30/04/2016 00:01, Karl Eggert wrote:
    Dear all, esp. martin
    The table of calculator results has not tranferred correctly. Now
    another try:

    Baroque lute of Martin Shepherd, 69 cm, a' 392 Hz

    Course        Diam (mm)               Tension (N)          Tension
    octave(N)

    1                    .44                                37,8
    2                    .48                               31,8
    3                    .60                                27,9
    4                    .74                                26,8
    5                    .82                                23,2
    6                    KF95 +.60
    23                           27,9
    7                    KF105 + .64
    23,2                       25,2
    8                    KF116 + .76
    21,6                       28,2
    9                    KF125 + .80
    22,4                       27,9
    10                 KF136 + .88
    21                           26,8
    11                 KF150 + .97              20,3
    25,8
    Best wishes,
    Karl

    Am 29.04.2016 um 23:02 schrieb Karl Eggert:

    Dear all,
    The PUL parameter of Savarez strings is the mass of 100m string length,
    so NFA 230  is a nylon multifilament string wound with silver plated
    copper that has a mass per length  of 230 g/100 m.
    Given the PUL in g/100m, you can calculate for wound strings (following
    from the Taylor equation):
    - Tension:  T (N) =  0,4 PUL [L(cm) f (Hz)/10000]^2     L= string
    length,  1 kg (force) = 9,807 Newton (N) approx. 10 N
    - Frequency f (Hz):   f (Hz)   = 15180 Sqrt [T (N)/PUL (g/100m)] / L
    (cm)
     - needed PUL for given f, T, L :   PUL (g/100m) = 2,5 T (N) / [L (cm)
    f (Hz)/10000] ^2
    The relation between PUL and the equivalent gut diameter deqiv is (gut
    density of 1330 kg/m3 assumed):

    PUL (g/100m) = 104,5 d eqiv^ (mm) ^2

    deqiv (mm) = 0,09784 Sqrt [PUL (g/m)]

    Savarez Alliance KF strings

    KF presumably means the Japanese Kureha Fluorocarbons corp. , who has
    invented PVDF (Polyvinylidenfluorid) in the past. So Alliance KF would
    be the product of an alliance of Savarez with Kureha.

    The strings with diameter up to 0,91 mm are plain strings made of
    clear PVDF.
    The thicker strings (0,95 mm +) are plain strings, opaque and of a
    yellowish colour. In the center some plastic fibers are embedded.

    Savarez somewhere wrote that these strings are produced by
    multicoating. I assume, that these strings are made from PVDF too. What
    fibres are used - I don't know, presumably PVDF too, for a stable
    composition of the materials.
    I have calculated the density of a KF 125 string (1,25 mm) from weight
    and volume and got 1775 kg/m3 (+/- 18). This is fairly near to the
    usual density of PVDF, 1770-1780 kg/m3. Arto Wikla found a density of
    1791 kg/m3.

    Savarez wrote on their web site: "... and the density is very close to
    gut."  !!!   ([1]http://www.savarez.fr/anglais/instanci-pince.html#1)

    If you believe this, you will get string tension 34% higher than
    assumed.

    Dear Martin, I have recalculated the tensions for baroque lute string
    set (Paul Beier's Calc); I hope the chart of results will come over
    correctly.

                    D-minor Lute_M Shepherd_11crs_sl69.bsc

                     Beier String and Fret Calculator File

                              Name: D-minor Lute

                               Maker: M Shepherd

                                 String Chart

                               Pitch: A = 392hz.

                           Bridge tension: 517,97 N.

                                    String

                                     Note

                                 Length (cm.)

                                 Tension (N.)

                                 Gut Diameter

                              Alternative string

                    Alternative Diameter / Catalogue number

                                       1

                                       f

                                      69

                                     37,84

                                     0,44

                                       2

                                       d

                                      69

                                     31,84

                                     0,48

                                       3

                                       A

                                      69

                                     27,93

                                      0,6

                                       4

                                       F

                                      69

                                     26,76

                                     0,74

                                       5

                                       D

                                      69

                                     23,23

                                     0,82

                                       6

                                      A'

                                      69

                                     23,02

                    Carbon PVF

                                     0,95

                                   octave 6

                                       A

                                       "

                                     27,93

                                      0,6

                                       7

                                      G'

                                      69

                                     22,32

                    Carbon PVF

                                     1,05

                                   octave 7

                                       G

                                       "

                                     25,22

                                     0,64

                                       8

                                      F'

                                      69

                                     21,63

                    Carbon PVF

                                     1,16

                                   octave 8

                                       F

                                       "

                                     28,23

                                     0,76

                                       9

                                      E'

                                      69

                                     22,37

                    Carbon PVF

                                     1,25

                                   octave 9

                                       E

                                       "

                                     27,86

                                      0,8

                                      10

                                      D'

                                      69

                                     21,02

                    Carbon PVF

                                     1,36

                                   octave 10

                                       D

                                       "

                                     26,76

                                     0,88

                                      11

                                      C'

                                      69

                                     20,29

                    Carbon PVF

                                     1,50

                                   octave 11

                                       C

                                       "

                                     25,8

                                     0,97

    You can see, that the tensions of the KF basses are somewhat lower than
    you had them. I would have expected them to become higher, for the
    density used in the calculator is 1776 kg/m3, while you used ca. 1300
    (?) x 1,1608 kg/m3, alright? Is it possible, that you used a higher
    density?
    I agree with you  that in the case of unwound (dull) bass fundamentals
    their  tensions should be lower than those of their octaves.  Some
    octave tensions are a bit high now, for my opinion.

    All the best

    Karl

    Am 25.04.2016 um 15:53 schrieb Matthew Daillie:

    Hi again Herbert, Martin, Arto et al.,
    I have just spoken with the technician at Savarez. They are redoing
    their website and hope to update their string calculator at some time
    in the future.
    In the meanwhile I managed to get some explanations regarding their
    reference numbers for over-wound strings. They offer silver wound
    strings (NFA), copper wound strings (NFC) and plastic wound strings
    (NFP). I have never tried the latter but Savarez recommend them for
    transitional strings on theorbo-necked instruments. I would be
    interested if anybody has any feedback on them.
    The numbers correspond to the PUL (linear density). For example, NFA
    230 is a silver wound string with a PUL of 2.3 g/metre. The silver and
    copper strings have different reference numbers because copper is
    slightly less dense than silver and to compensate the inner core is
    thicker so as to give the same tension.
    One can calculate the tension with the following formula, making sure
    to use the same units for SL and PUL (I hope I've got it right, I'm not
    a mathematician by any stretch of the imagination!):
    4 x the frequency^2 x string length^2 x PUL
    This gives tension in kilos, for Newtons divide by 9.8
    The technician gave me specific tensions for your baroque lute 9th
    course fundamental (E at a'415):
    NFA 230 gives 2.7 kgs
    NFA 250 gives 3 kgs
    NFA 275 gives 3.1 kgs
    Strangely, when I do the calculations with his formula I don't get
    quite the same results so maybe he was using a more complex formula (or
    winding down for his afternoon nap).
    I think Paul Beier's calculator is definitely the way to go for
    simplicity's sake. Otherwise, why not use Kuerschner or Aquila, their
    references use gut equivalent diameters and so are very straight
    forward for tension calculations?
    Anyway, one string down, 23 to go!
    Best,
    Matthew
      On 25/04/2016 05:00, Herbert Ward wrote:

As an experiment, I put extremely light strings on my baroque lute.
This made the tone very difficult to control.   This is pretty good
practice, but in a month or two I need to venture out of the house
with the lute.

So it's string buying time.

Can someone give me a Savarez PUL number for the fundamental of the
9th course (E) at AA5 with a 68.5 cm string length?  Also helpful
would be an indication of whether the PUL corresponds to heavy, medium,
or light stringing.

Google searches gave nothing useful.



To get on or off this list see list information at
[1][2]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html


    .
    --

References

    1. [3]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html


     kg/m assumed
    --

References

    1. http://www.savarez.fr/anglais/instanci-pince.html#1
    2. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/%7Ewbc/lute-admin/index.html
    3. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/%7Ewbc/lute-admin/index.html



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