music theroy question - should be easy

And it's "theory"...still haven't learned from your question on enclosure alignments, have we?

//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/biggrin.gif.d71a5d36fcbab170f2364c9f2e3946cb.gif

 
yea yea. lol, i am dislexic sometimes //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/tongue.gif.6130eb82179565f6db8d26d6001dcd24.gif

thanks for the link though jack.

 
um. im trying to find what a half octave of a certain frequency is //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/tongue.gif.6130eb82179565f6db8d26d6001dcd24.gif

1.7 The 3rd Harmonic and the Interval of a Fifth
The relationship of a frequency, F, and its double, 2F, is an octave, 4F a further octave and so on. But what of a frequency three times that of the fundamental, 3F? This is about an octave and a half above the fundamental and is the interval known to musicians as a twelfth, or one octave plus a fifth (because it is that many steps in the conventional musical scale). This interval is the second most important interval after the octave.

The interval of a twelfth is represented by the ratio 3 / 1. To obtain the interval of a fifth we must reduce this by an octave, 1 / 2, so the interval of a fifth is represented by the ratio 3 / 2, three times the fundamental but transposed down an octave. A fifth is the interval which exists between the 2nd and 3rd harmonics of an harmonic series.
so a 3\1 fraction = .33 repeating. so say i want to do one half step down from 60hz.

60 x .33 = 19.8

60 - 19.8 = 40.2hz

so 40.2hz would be one half step (half octave?) down from 60?

is this right?

 
um. its related to a certain SPL application a friend of mine is doing. 60hz is pulled from my ***.

basically, i read a few places that tuning a SPL box to a half octave below the cars resonant frequency is a good place to start - rather than guessing. so im trying to learn how the hell music theORists calculate half octaves. thats all.

 
what? how would an RTA aid me in finding half step\octave below the peak? i could try to find the peak (or near it) with the RTA - it will NOT give me specific numbers like 64hz, because its only 1\3 octave - and will not show every frequency, and it does not list the decible level (sadly - or id use it for a makeshift SPL mic //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/tongue.gif.6130eb82179565f6db8d26d6001dcd24.gif )

 
so a 3\1 fraction = .33 repeating. so say i want to do one half step down from 60hz.
Well, to start with; the fraction 3/1 = 3, not .33

2nd, That scale was for increasing in frequency. You are wanting to decrease in frequency by one-half octave; not increase.

So, if an octave higher is represented as 2/1, then an octave lower would be the reciprocal of that, or 1/2. Now, you are wanting to find 1/2 of that 1/2; or more easily, 1/4. So, you could take that 60hz and subtract 1/4, or (more quickly) mulitply it by 3/4.

So, one octave lower than 60hz is 45hz. To verify this; one octave lower from 60hz is 30hz. The middle point between those is 45hz.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but that's just using logic.

 
Well, to start with; the fraction 3/1 = 3, not .33
2nd, That scale was for increasing in frequency. You are wanting to decrease in frequency by one-half octave; not increase.

So, if an octave higher is represented as 2/1, then an octave lower would be the reciprocal of that, or 1/2. Now, you are wanting to find 1/2 of that 1/2; or more easily, 1/4. So, you could take that 60hz and subtract 1/4, or (more quickly) mulitply it by 3/4.

So, one octave lower than 60hz is 45hz. To verify this; one octave lower from 60hz is 30hz. The middle point between those is 45hz.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but that's just using logic.

//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/crazy.gif.c13912c32de98515d3142759a824dae7.gif

I read Req's reply and it was drivin me crazy. I didnt know wether or not I had forgotten everything I learned in Physics and Calc or if he was just wrong.

 
Just one more example.

An octave down is, as mentioned, 1/2 the origional F. So an octave down of 4F would be 2F, and up would be 8F. So use simple math to find the answer.

Take 500Hz.

Divide by 2 for 250Hz.

500-250=250

Divide 250 by 2 for 125

250Hz + 125Hz = 375Hz.

This leaves you with 125Hz above 1/2F and 125 below 1F. The half step will always have the same value above AND below 1/2F and 1F, therefor being 3/4F //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wink.gif.608e3ea05f1a9f98611af0861652f8fb.gif.

 
at first i was doing the 1\4 thing, because that was logic. but somewhere i read that it was some kind of weird graph chart logrythm thing and it wasnt just a quarter less //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/tongue.gif.6130eb82179565f6db8d26d6001dcd24.gif

45hz was my first guess - thanks though. im not that big of a math person.

 
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