Earlier today, I wrote that if you ignored the increasing mass of paper on
the take-up spool, a piano roll that started at a tempo of 70 would be
traveling at a speed of 85 after 25 feet. After arriving home, I checked my
notes. The actual value I calculated was a tempo of 82.6. Here is my
derivation:
I measured an empty take-up spool to have a circumference of 5.25". After 41
rotations of QRS transparent white paper (circa 1970's), the circumference
had grown to 6". The radius of the take-up spool was increasing by 0.00289"
with each rotation.
I then calculated that after 52 rotations, 24.8 feet of roll is wound on to
the take-up spool. The circumference of the spool is now 6.2". If we could
assume the take-up spool is still turning at 16 RPM, the roll would be
traveling over the tracker bar at a tempo of 82.6. It seems that you would
be able to notice this change. I can not. Therefore, a significant amount
of this increase must be offset by the increasing mass of paper on the
take-up spool.
--Bill Jelen
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