extra holes (another beginner question)

This may sound a bit silly, but the answer doesn’t seem to be anywhere. Tape could be used, but that leaves such a sticky mess on pretty wood work. Corks are really hard to find around here, try impossible.

oh, the question;
Does any one know what the two big holes way down at the bottom of a d flute do. They’re to far down to play, but they must have a purpose, because so many pictures have them. Maybe at Christmas time we could put mistletoe in them.

thanks for the answer.
jeff :slight_smile:

[ This Message was edited by: Spot Beagle on 2001-10-10 03:37 ]

On old flutes those two holes would have had keys, to enable the playing of low C and lowC#. When Irish flute players took to the flute, they often removed the keys because they never used them, since they just played the flute like a low D whistle. For some reason modern keyless flute makers like to make their flutes with what is really a low C foot joint, without the keys. Perhaps they like the way they look?

The longer foot with the two holes aren’t meant to be covered up except on a modern concert flute. The supposed reason for the longer foot and the two tone holes is because it makes the lower notes more solid and clearer.

I can’t speak for Irish simple-system flutes, but on modern flutes, a B-foot (the longer foot) does seem to have a more solid lower octave than a C-foot.

On 2001-10-10 10:18, DrGiggles wrote:
The longer foot with the two holes aren’t meant to be covered up except on a modern concert flute.

thank you, I’ll stop hunting for corks then.

don’t cork them!
they’re venting holes to ensure the bottom register, particularly the low D, is in pitch.
talk about plugging holes in a flute, my favorite (or not) story is how Seamus Tansey took his antique Rudall&Rose (he calls it a Ruddle), removed all the keys, filed down all the block mounts and plugged the holes. Seems they were getting in his way.
Eeeek!
Now, seeing as he “ruined” a Rudall in some people’s eyes, I wonder if it’s still a collectible simply because it was Seamus Tansey’s Rudall! Now there’s a switch!