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Making a Bullroarer — The Oldest Instrument You Swing Through the Air
Woody

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Woody

3. 7월 2026NO
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Making a Bullroarer — The Oldest Instrument You Swing Through the Air

Make a bullroarer: a flat blade of wood on a long cord that ROARS when you whirl it around your head. Shape and bevel the blade, drill the cord hole, and swing it in clear open space. A buildable school project in the free aerophone — sound made by a spinning blade, one of humanity's oldest instruments, found on every inhabited continent.
초급
About an hour

안내

1

Sound from a spinning blade

A bullroarer is just a flat slat of wood on a cord. Whirl it around your head and it spins on the twisting cord, chops the air, and makes a deep pulsing ROAR. It is one of the oldest instruments humans have — used across the world for tens of thousands of years.
2

Cut the blade

Cut a flat blade about a hand-span long and two fingers wide — a long thin oval or leaf shape, a few millimetres thick. Bigger, heavier blades roar deeper; small light ones buzz higher.

이 단계의 재료:

Dry Softwood BoardDry Softwood Board1

필요한 도구:

Sloyd Carving KnifeSloyd Carving Knife
3

Bevel both long edges

Carve both long edges down to a slant, like a knife or an aeroplane wing — one edge sloping up, the other down. These bevels are what make the blade spin as it slices the air. Sand it smooth.
4

Drill the cord hole

Pierce one small hole near ONE end of the blade, well in from the tip so it will not split out.

필요한 도구:

AwlAwl
5

Tie a long cord

Tie a strong cord about an arm's length through the hole. A short handle loop at the far end gives you something safe to hold.

이 단계의 재료:

Abaca Tying TwineAbaca Tying Twine1
6

Swing it — in clear open space

SAFETY FIRST: go outside to a wide open space with NO people, animals or windows within two cord-lengths — a swinging bullroarer hits hard. Whirl it in a big circle around your head. It roars; whirl faster for a higher pitch, slower for a lower one.
7

Compendium — the free aerophone

Almost every instrument makes sound by shaking a trapped column of air (a flute), a string, a skin or a solid bar. The bullroarer does something rarer: it is a FREE aerophone — it stirs the open air directly, with no tube and no enclosed cavity at all. Here is the mechanism. As you whirl the blade, the cord winds and unwinds, so the blade spins rapidly about its own long axis; because its edges are bevelled like a propeller, the spinning aerofoil sheds a train of little swirling vortices off its edges, and each shed vortex is a pressure pulse — a puff of sound. The blade spins many times a second, so those puffs blur into a continuous rolling ROAR whose pitch rises the faster the blade spins. On top of that, swinging the whole thing around your head sweeps the sound source toward you and away again, so the roar swells and fades in a wah-wah wobble — the same Doppler effect you hear in a passing siren. This is close kin to the aeroacoustic 'edge tone' that voices every flute (a jet of air fluttering past an edge), which is why the bullroarer sits in the aerophone family alongside the bone flute and the panpipe — but where those tune a captive air column with finger holes or pipe lengths, the bullroarer simply throws sound into the open sky. Found from Aboriginal Australia to Stone-Age Europe to the Americas, it is among the very oldest human instruments, and almost everywhere it was treated as a sacred voice.

재료

2

필요 도구

2

You can swap these in

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

관련 블루프린트

이 블루프린트들은 지식을 공유합니다 — 기술, 재료 또는 원리

CC0 퍼블릭 도메인

이 블루프린트는 CC0로 공개되었습니다. 어떤 목적으로든 자유롭게 복사, 수정, 배포 및 사용할 수 있습니다.

제품 구매를 통해 메이커를 지원하세요. 판매자가 설정한 메이커 커미션 을 받거나, 이 블루프린트의 새로운 반복을 만들어 연결로 포함시킬 수 있습니다.

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