SANAA
UREMBO NA USTAWI
UJANJA
UTAMADUNI NA HISTORIA
BURUDANI
MAZINGIRA
CHAKULA NA VINYWAJI
BAADAYE YA KIJANI
REVERSE ENGINEERING
SAYANSI
MICHEZO
TEKNOLOJIA
VAZI

Building a Santur — The Persian Hammered Dulcimer
Build a santur, Persia's hammered dulcimer: dozens of strings stretched across a trapezoidal box over two rows of little bridges, struck with two tiny wooden hammers. Set the strings and bridges, tune the courses, and learn why a struck string shimmers — the mechanism that would one day become the piano. A serious maker build in the struck string.
Kati
Several hours over a few sessions
Maagizo
1
1
Strings you hit, not pluck
Strings you hit, not pluck
The santur is Persia's hammered dulcimer: dozens of strings across a trapezoidal box, struck with two tiny wooden hammers. Struck strings shimmer — and this is the instrument the piano grew from.
2
2
Build the trapezoidal box
Build the trapezoidal box
Build a shallow trapezoidal wooden box — wider at the front than the back — with a thin, light soundboard on top. This box is the resonator.
Vifaa kwa hatua hii:
Baltic Birch Plywood (1/8 inch, 12x12, 10-Pack)1 kipande
Dry Softwood Board1 kipande
PVA Wood Glue1 kipandeZana zinazohitajika:
Hacksaw3
3
Set the pins
Set the pins
Fit a row of fixed hitch pins down one slanted side and a row of tuning pins down the other. The courses of strings will stretch between them.
Vifaa kwa hatua hii:
Tuning Pegs9 vipandeZana zinazohitajika:
Awl4
4
String the courses
String the courses
Stretch the strings across in groups (courses) of three or four tuned together — thin steel for the high courses, thicker bronze for the low ones. A full santur has around seventy strings.
Vifaa kwa hatua hii:
Steel Music Wire 0.032"1 kipande
Bronze Wire1 kipande5
5
Stand the bridges
Stand the bridges
Carve two rows of small wooden bridges (kharak) and stand them under the strings. Each bridge lifts a course and splits some strings so one string gives two notes, one on each side.
Zana zinazohitajika:
Sloyd Carving Knife6
6
Tune the courses
Tune the courses
Tune each course with its pin. The two rows of bridges and the pins together let you set the Persian scale, including its quarter-tones.
7
7
Make the hammers
Make the hammers
Carve two very light, springy wooden hammers (mezrab), thin enough to bend, that you hold loosely between your fingers.
Vifaa kwa hatua hii:
Dowel Rod1 kipandeZana zinazohitajika:
Sloyd Carving Knife8
8
Strike a string
Strike a string
Tap a course with the tip of a hammer and let it bounce straight off. The strings ring out bright and shimmering — struck, not plucked.
9
9
Play across the bridges
Play across the bridges
Strike a string on both sides of its bridge to get two different notes from one string, and roll the two hammers fast for the santur's rippling tremolo.
10
10
Compendium — the struck string
Compendium — the struck string
The santur is a hammered dulcimer: instead of plucking or bowing, you set each string ringing with a sharp, glancing blow from a tiny wooden hammer that bounces straight off, leaving the string free to sing. A struck string is still just a string — its pitch rises with tension and falls with length and mass, exactly as on a lyre or guitar — but the hammer starts it with a bright, percussive attack and a long shimmering decay, which is the whole character of the dulcimer family's sound. The santur's strings run in courses, several tuned together for fullness, over two rows of little bridges; each bridge not only lifts the strings but divides some of them, so one string sounds one note to the left of its bridge and a different note to the right, packing many pitches into a small box, tuned with pins to the microtonal scales of Persian music. The trapezoidal soundboard amplifies it all, as a soundboard does in any string instrument. The hammered dulcimer is ancient and spread far and wide — the Persian santur, the Iraqi and Indian santoor, the Chinese yangqin, the Hungarian cimbalom and the European and Appalachian hammered dulcimers are all the same idea. And it has one very famous descendant: put the little hammers on the ends of levers and let a keyboard throw them at the strings, and the hammered dulcimer becomes the PIANO. On Youblob its box-zither cousin is the langspil, whose strings can also be sounded by hammering.
Vifaa
7- Kishikilia Nafasi
- 1 kipandeKishikilia Nafasi
- 1 kipandeKishikilia Nafasi
- 9 vipandeKishikilia Nafasi
- 1 kipandeKishikilia Nafasi
- 1 kipandeKishikilia Nafasi
You can swap these in
Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.
- Instead of Sloyd Carving Knife, try:
Blunt Collection Knife
Gilder's Knife
Knife
Sharp Cinnamon Knife - Instead of PVA Wood Glue, try:
Polyurethane Glue - Instead of Baltic Birch Plywood (1/8 inch, 12x12, 10-Pack), try:
CDX Softwood Plywood
Fire-Rated Plywood - Instead of Steel Music Wire 0.032", try:
Hook-Up Wire - Assortment (Stranded)
Tie Wire
Thin Brass Wire (for cleaning spouts)
Slip Ring - 6 Wire (2A)
Bezel Wire
Blueprint zinazohusiana
Blueprint hizi zinashiriki maarifa — mbinu, vifaa au kanuni
Related blueprints
Other builds that share materials, tools, or techniques with this one.

Building a Janggu — The Korean Hourglass Drum

Building a Cajón — The Peruvian Box Drum You Sit On

Building a Roman Ballista — The Torsion-Powered Bolt Throwerengineering

Building a Roman Odometer — The Gear-Driven Distance Measurerengineering

Building a Morin Khuur — The Mongolian Horse-Head Fiddle

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