Without the shell, though, even the slightest partial engagement of the valve will port air to whatever the casing is open to--vents, loose bearings--whatever. The solid outer shell provides a seal against the casing, and so a partial engagement only leaks sound between the bugle and that valve branch. I think it will change the way the valve carves the sound in a legato passage, but that's just a theory.bloke wrote:...
- Leaving material on the circumference of the rotor bodies (in order to leave only two round holes exposed per side) is going to add weight (as - again - there's more material left in place than with typical rotors...and - not only more material, but - material at the circumference, which is going to require more energy to get the rotor body rotating).
But the shell can be pretty thin. To be non-structural, however, something fancy has to be done to firmly support the bottom bearing pin. I can think of a couple of ways of doing it, but which may add nearly as much weight as a thin shell (though perhaps not as much inertia). But they'll have to avoid the two ports touching, or nearly touching, where they meet in the middle of the valve, where I suspect tube-constructed ports are soldered or brazed together. That means some kind of a donut that goes around that contact point to provide a mounting point for the bottom bearing pin. But with a shell, the bottom bearing pin can be mounted on a plate on the bottom of the valve. I am sure that's how Cerveny made their hollow rotors.
Rick "noting that the rotors in his Hirsbrunner are heavy, but still pretty fast" Denney



