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Building a Hurdy-Gurdy — The Crank-Powered Wheel Fiddle
Woody

Imeundwa na

Woody

3. Julai 2026NO
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Building a Hurdy-Gurdy — The Crank-Powered Wheel Fiddle

Build a hurdy-gurdy: a medieval string instrument bowed not by hand but by a rosined WHEEL you turn with a crank. A keyboard of tangents fingers the melody, drone strings hum underneath, and a buzzing bridge beats the rhythm — melody, harmony and percussion from one cranking hand. A serious maker build in the wheel-bow, the tangent keyboard and the drone.
Kati
Several hours over several sessions

Maagizo

1

A fiddle you crank

The hurdy-gurdy is bowed not by hand but by a rosined wheel you turn with a crank. A little keyboard fingers the melody, drones hum underneath, and a buzzing bridge beats the rhythm — a whole band worked by one cranking hand.
2

Build the soundbox

Build a hollow wooden body with a light soundboard on top — lute-shaped or a simple box. It carries and amplifies all the strings.

Vifaa kwa hatua hii:

Baltic Birch Plywood (1/8 inch, 12x12, 10-Pack)Baltic Birch Plywood (1/8 inch, 12x12, 10-Pack)1 kipande
Dry Softwood BoardDry Softwood Board1 kipande
PVA Wood GluePVA Wood Glue1 kipande

Zana zinazohitajika:

HacksawHacksaw
3

Make the wheel

Cut a smooth, perfectly round wooden wheel that pokes up through a slot in the soundboard. It must run TRUE, without any wobble, or the sound will judder.

Vifaa kwa hatua hii:

Baltic Birch Plywood (1/8 inch, 12x12, 10-Pack)Baltic Birch Plywood (1/8 inch, 12x12, 10-Pack)1 kipande

Zana zinazohitajika:

Sloyd Carving KnifeSloyd Carving Knife
4

Fit the axle and crank

Mount the wheel on an axle through the body with a bent crank handle at one end, so it spins freely and smoothly when you turn the crank.

Vifaa kwa hatua hii:

Dowel RodDowel Rod1 kipande

Zana zinazohitajika:

AwlAwl
5

Rosin the wheel rim

Coat the edge of the wheel with pine rosin. The rosined rim is a bow that never stops — it grips and releases the strings over and over as it turns.
6

Lay the strings over the wheel

Stretch the strings along the top so they rest lightly on the rim of the wheel, tuned with pegs at the far end. Wind a little cotton on each string where it meets the wheel for a clean tone.

Vifaa kwa hatua hii:

Steel Music Wire 0.032"Steel Music Wire 0.032"1 kipande
Tuning PegsTuning Pegs4 vipande
7

Choose melody and drones

Set aside one or two strings as the MELODY strings and the rest as DRONES, which will sound one steady note the whole time the wheel turns.
8

Build the key-box

Build a box over the melody strings holding a row of sliding wooden KEYS, each carrying a small peg — a tangent.

Vifaa kwa hatua hii:

Dowel RodDowel Rod1 kipande

Zana zinazohitajika:

Sloyd Carving KnifeSloyd Carving Knife
9

Set the tangents

Position each key's tangent so that pressing the key pushes it against the melody string and shortens it to the next note of the scale — a keyboard of frets you press from the side.
10

Test the wheel-bow

Turn the crank steadily. The wheel bows every string it touches at once, so the melody strings and all the drones sing together.
11

Play a tune over a drone

Crank with one hand and press the keys with the other. The keys pick out the melody while the drones hum steadily beneath it, just like a bagpipe.
12

Add the buzzing bridge

Rest one drone string on a loose, lopsided little bridge — the 'dog' (chien). A sharp jerk of the crank makes it snap up and buzz against the soundboard: a built-in drum.
13

Play the rhythm

Give the crank little accented pushes so the buzzing bridge rattles in time. Now you have melody, drone AND rhythm, all from one turning wheel.
14

Compendium — the wheel that never stops bowing

The hurdy-gurdy is a bowed string instrument whose bow is a wheel. A wooden disc, its rim coated in rosin, is turned by a crank so it rubs continuously against the strings, grabbing and releasing them by the same stick-slip friction as a violin bow or the erhu — but this bow never lifts, so every string it touches sings on and on for as long as you crank. That is why the hurdy-gurdy makes drones so naturally: the strings you are not fingering simply hum a steady note, a built-in bagpipe. The melody is played by a keyboard: pressing a key pushes a little wooden tangent against a melody string to shorten its speaking length to the next note, exactly the way a fret does, so a row of keys becomes a fingerboard you play without ever touching the string. And the rhythm comes from a clever trick — one string rides on a loose, lopsided bridge called the 'dog'; a sudden push on the crank makes that bridge snap and buzz against the soundboard, a sharp percussive 'coup' the player fires in time with the tune. So one cranking hand drives melody, harmony and rhythm at once, which is why the hurdy-gurdy was the one-person dance band of European villages for a thousand years. It began in the Middle Ages as the large two-person organistrum played in churches, then shrank into the portable vielle à roue. Its wheel bows the same strings a lyre plucks, a santur hammers and a morin khuur bows by hand, and its constant-drone cousin is the bagpipe.

Vifaa

6

Zana Zinazohitajika

3

You can swap these in

Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.

Blueprint zinazohusiana

Blueprint hizi zinashiriki maarifa — mbinu, vifaa au kanuni

CC0 Umma Wote

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