Organ Pipe Calculator: Find the Right Pipe Length & Frequency

🎵 Organ Pipe Calculator

Calculate pipe length, frequency, harmonics & tuning for open and closed organ pipes

Quick Presets
📏 Pipe Parameters
🎵 Organ Pipe Results
📊 Pipe Voice Characteristics
8 ft
Open Diapason
Fundamental Length
4 ft
Stopped Gedackt
Equivalent Pitch
16 ft
Pedal Bourdon
Stopped Length
2 ft
Piccolo / Super
Octave Length
1125
Speed of Sound
ft/s at 20°C
343
Speed of Sound
m/s at 20°C
0.6r
End Correction
Per Open End
1:2
Open:Closed
Length Ratio
📋 Frequency & Pipe Length Reference Table
Note Freq (Hz) Open Length (ft) Open Length (m) Closed Length (ft) Closed Length (m) Standard Stop
C132.7017.225.258.612.6232 ft Open
C265.418.612.624.301.318 ft Open
G298.005.741.752.870.875-1/3 ft Quint
C3130.814.301.312.150.664 ft Open
E3164.813.411.041.710.523-1/5 ft Tierce
G3196.002.870.871.440.442-2/3 ft Nasard
C4261.632.150.661.080.332 ft Octave
A4440.001.280.390.640.201-3/5 ft Larigot
C5523.251.080.330.540.161 ft Piccolo
C61046.500.540.160.270.081/2 ft Mixture
🎼 Standard Organ Stop Lengths & Pitches
Stop Name Foot Length Lowest Note Pipe Type Pitch vs 8 ft Typical Use
Sub Bass32 ftC1 (16 Hz)Closed2 octaves belowPedal
Open Diapason8 ftC2 (32.7 Hz)OpenUnisonManual
Bourdon16 ftC1 (16 Hz)Closed1 octave belowPedal/Manual
Octave / Prestant4 ftC3 (65.4 Hz)Open1 octave aboveManual
Gedackt / Stopped Flute8 ftC2 (32.7 Hz)ClosedUnisonManual
Quint / Nasard2-2/3 ftG3 (98 Hz)Open12th aboveManual
Super Octave / Piccolo2 ftC4 (130.8 Hz)Open2 octaves aboveManual
Tierce1-3/5 ftE4 (164.8 Hz)Open17th aboveManual
Larigot1-1/3 ftG4 (196 Hz)Open19th aboveManual
Trumpet8 ftC2 (32.7 Hz)ReedUnisonManual
📐 Harmonics Reference (Open vs Closed Pipes)
Harmonic Open Pipe Closed Pipe Frequency Ratio Musical Interval
1st (Fundamental)f = v / 2Lf = v / 4L1xFundamental
2nd Harmonicf = v / LNot present2xOctave above
3rd Harmonicf = 3v / 2Lf = 3v / 4L3xOctave + 5th
4th Harmonicf = 2v / LNot present4x2 Octaves above
5th Harmonicf = 5v / 2Lf = 5v / 4L5x2 Oct + Major 3rd
💡 Tip 1 — End Correction: Real organ pipes are slightly longer than the theoretical formula predicts. For an open pipe, add an end correction of approximately 0.6 times the pipe radius to each open end. For a stopped pipe, only one end correction applies. This is why voiced pipes are often cut slightly long then tuned down.
💡 Tip 2 — Temperature & Tuning: The speed of sound changes with temperature: v = 331.3 + (0.606 × °C) m/s. A 10°C rise increases the speed of sound by about 1.8%, raising pitch by the same amount. Organ pipes go sharp in warm weather and flat in cold. Always tune at the expected playing temperature.

organ pipe forms the sound-making part of the pipe organ. When pressed air, usually called wind is pushed through it, it makes sound. Every such pipe matches to one particular note from the musical range.

Because each of them only makes one fixed tone, one arranges them in groups, that one calls ranks. In one rank all pipes have the same tone and strength.

How a Pipe Organ Makes Sound

Pipe organ is made up of four main parts: keyboard or several keyboards, pipes that create the sound, device that delivers air under pressure, and system that binds the keys to the pipes so that wind arrives to them at the right moment. The keyboard part does not make sound. Only when air flows in the pipes, music sounds.

Bellows pump air through wind pipelines and into wind chests. The wind chest keeps the air at steady pressure, ready for use when one presses a key. Every pipe stands above that hollow wind chest.

Pressing a key, one opens a valve that allows air to enter in the right pipe. The pipe either receives wind or stays silent. There is no in-between speed as on the piano.

Various materials and shapes of pipes give different sounds. Some pipes copy the sound of other instruments. Every particular sound is called a stop.

Like this a three-stop organ allows you to choose between three different sounds. The stops one controls by means of knobs, that helps the player decide which sound to use. Switching diffrent stops, one turns on various groups of pipes when a key is pressed.

Also, traditional pipes are made from wood, zinc or tin, but there also existed special pipes. Some had adjustable parts for making a series of sounds. Others used moving membranes for various vibrating effects or adjustable holes for controlling the pressure.

Some were designed four research into how the position of the mouthpiece affects the sound or how the size and shape of the pipe changes the hearing.

In the physical world, organ pipe tubes serve as a classic example for showing standing waves, harmonies and resonance. The natural frequency of the vibrating air column in a pipe is inversely proportional to the length of that column. The ends of an organ pipe reflect the sound wave in it.

Open pipes have two open ends and follow other rules than closed pipes. Actual design of a pipe is very complex, because even small changes in diameter affect both tone and sound.

Medieval organs did not have a way to separate different ranks during play. All pipes sounded together. One considers the pipe organ the most ancient and biggest instrument in musical history.

In one single press of a key, dozens of pipes of various sizes cansound at the same time, filling the room with strong music.

Organ Pipe Calculator: Find the Right Pipe Length & Frequency

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