Tuning pegs for musical instruments are commonly made from ebony or boxwood, but in medieval times and renaissance they would also be made from roasted maple. Maple is a relatively soft wood, so the trick is to roast it, which makes it very light and porous, and then let it soak in a mixture of linseed oil and turpentine overnight. It soaks the oil in like a sponge, going from swimming on the surface to sinking to the ground when it’s saturated. The oil hardens and reinforces the wood, kind of like epoxy stabilised wood.

    • alleycat@feddit.orgOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      3
      ·
      1 month ago

      Yup, they’re just lightly pressed into a tapered hole. You just have to turn them with a greater force than the string exerts on them, and ideally they stay put after you let go of them. Works well for gut/synthetic strings, less so for steel strings because those lengthen very little so friction tuners would be too imprecise.