Mike's Oud Forums
Not logged in [Login - Register]
Go To Bottom

Printable Version  
Author: Subject: A peg solution
smast
Oud Addict
***




Posts: 28
Registered: 8-1-2010
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 8-22-2011 at 01:42 AM
A peg solution


Hello all,
I posted a few months back about tuning issues on a Moroccan oud and got a huge amount of help from people so thanks again! I got myself an Egyptian oud (I'm pretty sure it's made by Sayed Fathy Amin, pictures posted), which is far easier to keep in tune and I have also managed to use it for performance, though changes in humidity and temperature do affect it a lot (as you would expect). Yesterday, my rehearsal room went up to 77% humidity at about 25c and it was very difficult to keep it in tune.
I'm pretty sure the pegs are not rosewood or ebony and I recently made enquiries about the cost of replacing them (I'm not that experienced in instrument maintenance myself), for which I was quoted £100 ($160), plus pegs. It was from a very good luthier in London. I know I could get hold of some viola pegs pretty cheaply.
Staying in tune live does concern me, as I play with a guitarist so being in tune with myself is not the only concern. So far I've had no big issues but you never know what the conditions are going to be like in a venue.
I'd be very interested and grateful to hear people's opinions - should I:
1) Do nothing and get over it!?
2) Have the pegs replaced with ebony/rosewood?
3) By an electric oud with machine heads? I like the look and feel of a real oud but if my only option is to go electric, I'll have to go ahead and do it. I'm using a k and k dual spot with a DI box, with good results at the moment.
Thanks!



Front.png - 332kB Head.png - 418kB Back.png - 437kB
View user's profile View All Posts By User
David.B
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 640
Registered: 9-5-2009
Location: France
Member Is Offline

Mood: Renaissance

[*] posted on 8-22-2011 at 02:31 AM


Hi smast,

For sure it is not ebony or rosewood. I'm not a specialist but if I remember well I read somewhere on this forum that ebony "sands" the hole which is softer... But more important : is it me or pegs are not straight (first photo) ?
View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
smast
Oud Addict
***




Posts: 28
Registered: 8-1-2010
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 8-22-2011 at 02:54 AM


Hi David,
Thanks for your reply. Yes - I was pretty sure they are a softer wood. My fault - I posted a photo of the same model but I don't think it's my actual oud. The photos posted were by the seller and I think it may be a different instrument. Here is the head of mine - I can see what you mean about the previous photo - it doesn't look quite straight.



Head own.jpg - 32kB
View user's profile View All Posts By User
David.B
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 640
Registered: 9-5-2009
Location: France
Member Is Offline

Mood: Renaissance

[*] posted on 8-22-2011 at 04:32 AM


Yes, this pegbox looks fine. Ebony or rosewood would help the oud to keep in tune, but of course, you've got to make the holes perfectly fit to the pegs. Also, strings are an important factor. Personally, I use Daniel Mari and the G strings are systematically out of tune, temperature, humidity... Question of matter I guess, because all the others keep in tune much longer.
View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
smast
Oud Addict
***




Posts: 28
Registered: 8-1-2010
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 8-22-2011 at 04:38 AM


That's good! Yes, I certainly wouldn't trust myself to do this job - I'd take it to a luthier... Is it worth doing this on an oud of this level? Bearing in mind I'd have to pay for it as I don't have the tools myself... If this would make it much more reliable, I'd be prepared to do it.
Thanks for your help
View user's profile View All Posts By User
roland
Oud Admirer
*




Posts: 9
Registered: 11-5-2003
Location: belgium
Member Is Offline

Mood: No Mood

[*] posted on 8-22-2011 at 08:57 AM
oud pegs


Hello Smast,

May be this article will interest you:
http://oudluthier.blogspot.com/2008/10/traditional-meets-technology...

Best whishes
View user's profile View All Posts By User
smast
Oud Addict
***




Posts: 28
Registered: 8-1-2010
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 8-22-2011 at 09:50 AM


Thanks, Roland - I'd heard of those but they slipped my mind (no pun intended!). I hadn't ever seen exactly how they work. They are a bit expensive, though! It seems they would be to get them shipped to the UK.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
smast
Oud Addict
***




Posts: 28
Registered: 8-1-2010
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 8-23-2011 at 03:32 AM


I think I may try these, referred to in an earlier post: http://www.stewmac.com/shop/Tuners/Dulcimer_tuners/Grover_Champion_...

I know it's not very authentic but hopefully it'll solve the problem... and they're not as expensive as the perfection pegs, etc.

View user's profile View All Posts By User
fernandraynaud
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 1865
Registered: 7-25-2009
Location: San Francisco, California
Member Is Offline

Mood: m'Oudy

[*] posted on 8-23-2011 at 05:16 PM


I dunno. If the luthier wants to charge you that much, I'd consider other options. And other issues. You never told us how much it slips. That's very different from stretching. The strings will stretch with humidity changes, and so will the wood.

What you are complaining about may not be corrected by changing pegs. I find that PVF strings are more stable than nylon after they settle in. But then the wound strings are the ones that seem to stretch. It doesn't matter if the pegs are even completely slip-proof, you will still have to touch up the tuning as your environment changes. It's not THAT difficult. If the pegs are not slipping, and can be made to be reasonably smooth yet hold by keeping them pushed in and with a little bit of peg dope or soap/chalk, then the pegs are fine, and they are are not the problem.

You may have to live with the way the wood and strings react to the environment. Or get a different oud that is less susceptible to those effects. Like a rigid frame electric with machine tuners (for good measure).

But by then you may not like the sound. Part of the character of an instrument is in those very things that respond to the surroundings.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
smast
Oud Addict
***




Posts: 28
Registered: 8-1-2010
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 8-24-2011 at 12:22 AM


I think there are two slipping issues - one is that a couple of the pegs have to be pushed in a lot and sometimes slip (loosen to almost slack) overnight (or occasionally during tuning) but I guess soap/chalk should solve that. Compared to tuning a violin, it's a difficult experience - the pegs feel a little flimsy and don't respond too well. But then my violin has ebony pegs and these are probably boxwood. It seems as though if the pegbox were smoother and the pegs a little better, it might improve things.

However, the other issue, as you suggest, is probably the oud reacting to the environment. It was unbearable the other night when it probably changed by about 20% relative humidity during a practice. This is pretty unlikely to happen in any other situation though. It seemed as though once I'd tuned up from C to C, the other C wasn't quite right, and then the G's seemed a little out, etc. The soundboard is not lacquered so I suppose it will absorb and give out a lot of moisture. And I am using nylon strings too.

As you say, it is expensive ($160) for a re-pegging job but London is one of the most stupidly expensive places on earth! I could try the job myself but my experience is only of very basic instrument maintenance. I could make other enquiries of luthiers that I've not used before.

If you think the champion/friction pegs would not work, I won't vandalise my instrument for no reason ;-)

Thanks again for your help.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
smast
Oud Addict
***




Posts: 28
Registered: 8-1-2010
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 8-24-2011 at 12:44 AM


Having just tuned up, I had to revisit the low C three times before it would stay at C (using an electronic tuner). I tuned it, then moved on to another course, went back to it and found it had slipped to nearly B, retuned it, revisited it after I had tuned the other strings and found it was still a little flat. After playing for about five minutes, one string on a few courses was a little flat. The pegs stick a lot too. Sorry, just trying to paint a picture of what it's like. In the past I haven't been quite so paranoid about checking with the tuner so it's possible I'm more aware of it now.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
David.B
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 640
Registered: 9-5-2009
Location: France
Member Is Offline

Mood: Renaissance

[*] posted on 8-24-2011 at 01:15 AM


Before you tune do you stretch courses? Do you put in order the strings in the pegbox like on the photo? At last, do you tune the oud like that : G courses first, then c, D, AA, CC, FF? If your pegs do not move the problem comes from the strings... And if strings are new it's OK, you've got to wait one week before the tuning stays stable.

6090_1146227786730_1558601928_347686_6845486_n.jpg - 49kB
View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
smast
Oud Addict
***




Posts: 28
Registered: 8-1-2010
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 8-24-2011 at 01:53 AM


Hi David, I don't stretch courses before tuning, no. I hadn't realised I should do that each time I tune. Although I have strung the oud as in the photo (http://www.oudcafe.com/stringing_and_tuning.htm), I don't tune in the order that you suggest. Thank you - I will try that out. The strings are a few months old.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
David.B
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 640
Registered: 9-5-2009
Location: France
Member Is Offline

Mood: Renaissance

[*] posted on 8-24-2011 at 02:17 AM


To stretch courses is not always necessary, but it can remove the residual tension between the pegs and the nut. I put C instead of F2, not so important, but if you tune g2 g1, c2 c1, d2 d1, A2 A1, C and F2 F1 (my way), you will keep the oud tuned during the whole process, because you respect the implantation of pegs. Many courses are laid on g2, so you move a little bit the whole tune when you adjust it at the end of the process... Hope you see what I mean :)
View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
smast
Oud Addict
***




Posts: 28
Registered: 8-1-2010
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 8-24-2011 at 02:55 AM


Thanks, David - that makes a lot of sense! :)
View user's profile View All Posts By User
fernandraynaud
Oud Junkie
*****




Posts: 1865
Registered: 7-25-2009
Location: San Francisco, California
Member Is Offline

Mood: m'Oudy

[*] posted on 8-24-2011 at 04:45 AM


... but if your strings are stretched, and the pegs are slipping, you might have to consider replacing the pegs. This is standard for an average oud. I have one that I have been considering and considering re-pegging, but everytime I consider I reconsider and just shove them pegs in until they hold.

Viola pegs can work, and you can get beautiful rosewood or whatever hard wood pegs in the US anyway for about a dollar a piece. Or you might find a set of 12 oud pegs. It's a matter of how the holes are tapered and how wide at entry. Lute/oud pegs are usually tapered about 16:1, while violin/viola pegs are around 30:1. Either is OK, the 30:1 requires less pushing in, once it's done it tends to just work, but can split a pegbox more easily they say. I'd go with 30:1.

You'd need a peg shaver and a reamer at the same taper, say 30:1, so you can ream the holes and get the pegs dialed in, as they are not perfectly tapered by the maker. You can find a matched tool set like that around fifty euros, or the chinese will sell ya a set for fifty bucks plus twenny to ship. So the new pegs and tools will cost around a hundred dollars. But think of all the holes you can ream! And you can also just touch up the hole and touch up the existing pegs once you have the tools. It's not that hard to do the work, and you have a little margin before you run out of peg length.

I started touching up my guilty oud with a 30:1 reamer and a shaver, and so far have done 4. One of these days I'm a' planning to do the rest. It's delicate to work with flawed stuff, not much material to work with, it's like doing neurosurgery on a village idiot, but if you shave them too much and ream too much, so that the peg goes ALL the way in (oops), that's when you pull out your virgin viola pegs and start from scratch.

It takes a bit of shaving to get viola pegs slimmed down! I didn't know rosewood was THAT hard. But those banjo dulcimer pegs look like a very ugly last resort, like using Billy Bob's old braces to rebuild when the neurosurgery didn't work out. And the real planetary pegs are beautiful, but unconscionably expensive. It's cheaper to get a new oud with good pegs. So now do you understand why it's beneficial to be understanding of imperfection? And that's why those pegs aren't any better.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
smast
Oud Addict
***




Posts: 28
Registered: 8-1-2010
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 8-24-2011 at 07:56 AM


Thanks, Fernand! Maybe now is the time to do my first bit of proper maintenance. I soldered an acoustic guitar pickup for the first time recently so maybe that was in preparation for bigger things! The last thing I want is an ugly last resort that doesn't even work so I think I may try and get wood-working. Even viola pegs are expensive in the UK (over $2) but I saw some rosewood Turkish oud pegs much cheaper; a complete set. Might these work or would they be too small for an Arabic oud? Thanks again.
View user's profile View All Posts By User

  Go To Top

Powered by XMB
XMB Forum Software © 2001-2011 The XMB Group