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may result in tonally poor bells. One of the problems is by increasing the thickness more energy is required to sustain the vibrations and as a result the decay time is shorter and the higher partials are attenuated giving an inferior sound. To compensate the proportion of tin to copper may be reduced from the usual 23-24% to 20% to produce a softer alloy. Another technique is to increase the weight by increasing the height of the trebles (elongating the waist) but this does have the disadvantage that it alters the harmonic spectrum. The graph shows typical diameter to frequency curves together with the linear relationship as per equation 2. It can be seen that the bell diameters have a linear relationship until a strike note frequency greater than 440Hz, where they deviate. The deviation curve, which is directly related to the increasing thickness scale, is usually a straight line to avoid a bell having a disproportionate size and weight when compared to its neighbours.
The graph gives examples of different weight profiles ranging from Canterbury Cathedral (also Llandaff cathedral), Stockton-on-Tees (also Ormskirk, Dalton-in-Furness, St Dunstan-in-the-East, Tewkesbury Abbey) and finally Highbridge (also Footscray).
The relative amplitude of each partial is dependent on the location of the impulse. The normal strike point is
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