The Parker Steam Synthesizer

The current Parker Steam Synth has sound, a stable mounting, high temperature tubing, a lever throttle / valve & a sound and electricity generating dynamo assembly.  

The boiler was completed May 16th and, well, boils - providing about 40psi of steam pressure! 

This clip was the first full steaming of the synth with the newly completed boiler:

VIDEO CLIP

movie clip


This project started as a discussion with my friend Lewis Keller. I kinda joked about the absurdity of a steam powered synthesizer, and how strange and inefficient it would be. Well, the idea stuck in my head and a year later, here it is the Parker Steam Synthesizer.

Here is what the steam synth's audio output sounds like (warning: very low frequencies):



MP3 - Synth Audio Output
waveform

Actual Waveform Generated by Steam Synthesizer

At low frequencies you can hear the idiosynchrasies caused by the piston changing directions. In this recording, the boiler was hooked up to the engine without a valve to control steam flow - so, the volume and pitch are directly controlled by the changing heat of the fire! Recorded from the line output to my laptop..

The steam synth runs best on coal (of course). However, since coal is hard to find in the Mojave desert where I live (who needs coal when it's 119 degrees?), I've also had success with:

- Esbit Tablets (smell awful, expensive, but very hot)

It requires a very constant, hot fire to keep the synth going continuously. The boiler can build up to 40-50psi before the safety valve opens, but the synth drains the steam out rather quickly. Sometimes is still stalls on esbit fuel after a minute or two. I am modifying the boiler to make it more efficient (a propane / air inlet for now - and added insulation to hold in heat).

About Making the Steam Powered Synthesizer:

    Engine castings are aluminum, and were purchased from PM Research who also sell a number of steam engine kits for machinists and hobby engineers. I couldn't afford the beauty of their full setups, so I got the minimum and machined what I could.

    The boiler is almost completely from a PM Research kit. Since it was my first boiler, I did not want to screw around with 400 degree high pressure steam explosions. I have slowly been modifying the boiler to accommodate my needs (adding air inlets, altering the firebox, etc).

    The sound generating dynamo is brushless 8 phase AC motor I pulled from a reel to reel tape machine speed control mechanism. It generates a perfect sine wave when viewed on the scope and turns super easily. This sound can be fed through a transformer, split up and rectified to generate some DC electricity.

    The belt is made from an old bicycle tire tube - a brilliant source of free, high quality rubber (check any bike shop dumpster).

    Output is about 6-10 watts when it's really cranking on compressed air or high steam pressure - less when it's running at lower frequencies on steam. 

    Pictures of the boiler flue tubes and plates prior to being placed in the shell. The flue tubes vent heat upward and create more surface area for hot gas to contact water:

assembling the boiler
boiler flue tubes