Professional quality Irish tinwhistles

Professional quality Irish tinwhistles

Boost
616
1272
113

Print Profile(5)

All
P1S
P1P
X1
X1 Carbon
X1E
A1
H2D
A1 mini

Whistle Bodies: 0.16mm layer, 2 walls, 10% infill
Whistle Bodies: 0.16mm layer, 2 walls, 10% infill
Designer
13.1 h
4 plates
4.8(19)

Whistle head: 0.16mm layer, 2 walls, 10% infill
Whistle head: 0.16mm layer, 2 walls, 10% infill
Designer
2.7 h
2 plates
4.9(17)

Tuning slide jig 0.2mm layer, 4 walls, 30% infill
Tuning slide jig 0.2mm layer, 4 walls, 30% infill
Designer
30 min
1 plate
5.0(4)

Printable Tuning Slide - 0.12mm layer
Printable Tuning Slide - 0.12mm layer
21 min
1 plate
4.9(7)
Click to see more

Open in Bambu Studio
Boost
616
1272
113
62
874
349
Released

Description

Membership

Click here to join our subscription program today! Includes commercial resale license for all of our models.

Join

 

3-Piece Traveler Model with integrated tuning slide now available here: https://makerworld.com/en/models/1148419#profileId-1152196

 

Boost Me (for free)

Boosts help keep me in filament to keep working on more models! I have printed hundreds of revisions of these whistles to get them just right! Please consider boosting if you like my work!

 

Greetings fellow musicians! I'm Greg, an experienced Irish whistler with nearly 30 years of playing under my belt. In addition to my passion for music, I've always been fascinated by technology and innovation.

 

Drawing from my experience crafting wooden whistles in the early 2000s, I've designed a professional-quality tinwhistle model that can now be produced through 3D printing. These instruments are perfect for serious musicians seeking a high-performance instrument or those looking to upgrade their collection.

 

 

Edit: I met up with Joanie Madden of Cherish the Ladies at the North Texas Irish Festival on March 2, 2025. For those who aren't steeped in the whistling world, she's one of the best whistlers on the planet.  This is her, playing one of my 3d printed whistles.

 

I spent over a year honing this model to something I am proud to carry around myself.  The print orientation and settings are such that you shouldn't need to do much voicing to get it to play well, and supports are at a minimum. 

 

Warning! You will need to have excellent bed adhesion. I use a nanopolymer adhesive from Vision Miner that can be found here: https://visionminer.com/products/nano-polymer-adhesive

I print on a P1S. No guarantees on how these things will behave on a bed-slinger.

 

Please note that I've made different print settings that are ideal for the heads and the bodies, so I am including two different print profiles to this model. The bodies profile has a C and a D whistle body. They both are made to fit the same size tuning slide, so the single head profile will work for both. I've also added a third print profile for the jig I use to make the tuning slide consistently. Put the tube in the jig, mark at the line, and then use a pipe cutter to cut the tube at the mark. You'll get a perfect-length bit of tuning slide every time.

 

The entire whistle is 3d printed except for the tuning slide. This area is quite thin, and doesn't withstand much lateral motion, so I've designed it to fit around a bit of stainless steel or brass tubing that I source form Amazon. The tube has to be 14mm OD with a .5mm thickness.  I use pipe cutters to cut these to 33mm lengths and glue them into the whistle.

 

 

The head piece and body both have a mortise to fit the tuning slide, but I find that i sometimes have to use a 14mm drill bit to ream them a little, mostly because the seam keeps them from being perfectly round inside.  Just ream a little, test the slide, and once it's right, use a bit of super glue to fix it to the mouthpiece.

 

Please make note of my licensing. These are for personal use. If you want to print whistles for sale, hit me up and we can work out some kind of deal.

 

Please note, if you have trouble getting a good sound out of the whistle, look up the whistle mouthpiece chimney and make sure that your printer didn't deposit a bit of cruft in there, as sometimes happens.

If that happens, just clean it out with a craft knife, or a thin jeweler's file.

 

 

 

 

 

Comment & Rating (113)

(0/5000)

Hi there. I've tried printing the head twice with the default profile on my A1 and both prints have issues where the corner of the windway meets the edge of the body. I'm going to try to adjust the profile to detect thin walls and orient it to give bed slingers a better chance to hold on to the print. EDIT to add: What's going on is Bambu Slicer is treating the area above the windway as its own section, printed as a series of loops. The only way I can get it to slice the head with a wall around the entire circumference of the head is to slice it for a 0.2 nozzle.
(Edited)
The designer has replied
1
Reply
ouch, that's rough. I'm not sure how to solve it for you on the A1. I get two little seams there on the p1s, but not nearly so pronounced. I've printed over 100 of them with this profile, in various types of PLA, and on 4 different machines. Edit: i'm going to try to make the whole head a little thicker and see if that cleans it up. Give me a few to print a test.
(Edited)
1
Reply
New profile is up for download. Give it a try! https://youtube.com/watch?v=V-_Hn1oO1to The heads are now ever-so-slightly thicker than the bodies, so I'm working on a test of the bodies now to make sure the half-millimeter increase to match doesn't affect tuning.
0
Reply
I had great success with my print profile with an 0.2mm nozzle. I'll likely upload that, and I will also give your updated profile a try with my 0.4mm nozzle. Appreciate your help.
1
Reply
Print Profile
Whistle head: 0.16mm layer, 2 walls, 10% infill
Fantastic flute, we are thrilled. It is perfectly functional and beautifully designed. Incidentally, I also printed V1 and experienced absolutely no seam issues. I used the printed version instead of the metal piece. It works perfectly. Unfortunately, we have no idea how to play it properly from sheet music or which notes correspond to which finger holes. But my two children are overjoyed with it.
Show original
1
Reply
I found the whistle works just as a pro model would for fingering chart, just find a corresponding tin whistle sheet to the D or C body. I haven’t tested the tuning in-depth, but it sounds perfect playing solo
1
Reply
Thank you for your help I will print my own tomorrow (otherwise the kids will be upset) and experiment with it a little more Perhaps it will suffice for the children's song "All my little ducks" 😂
Show original
0
Reply
Great model but when printing the mouth piece, the slicer adds support in mid air at what I believe is called the 'Fipple'. If you click 'Don't Support Bridges' under the 'Support' tab at the bottom, it prevents this happening. The 'Fipple' can bridge quite happily and cleanly without it.
(Edited)
The designer has replied
3
Reply
thanks for the tip! I always have to clean that little bit out (as you can see on the pic at the bottom of the model description). I'll give it a try.
1
Reply
that's fantastic! I'm a novice whistler myself. love to compare its tone and breath with my mk pro. boosted. just because this is why I got into 3d printing, not to make Pokémon miniatures nobody needs lol.
8
Reply
Hi there, I printed with Silk PLA and it looks fantastic. It is really a professional equipment. Just a thought, is there a specific reason for infill? Maybe without infill with 2 or 3 walls, it would be better and quicker to print. Lastly, In your first edition there was no assemble jig and I basicly print 14.3 diameter 35 mm long cylinder with vase mode and it fits perfectly. Now I tried the jig you designed, it fits very good but maybe should less clearence.
The designer has replied
1
Reply
Basically, I experimented until I got a sound I liked, and then stopped :) During my early design phases, small changes could result in prints failing/toppling over, or the sound quality getting worse, or tuning issues. To me, the sound was paramount. So, once I got the body where it produced a good sound and could print consistently without failures, I stopped. One of the reasons it takes so long to print is because I slowed it way down to help alleviate the toppling issue. tall, thin prints are tricky! The 3d-printed tuning slide is someone else's design, but I'm glad they put it up there for people who don't want to wait or purchase metal tubing.
(Edited)
1
Reply
Print Profile
Whistle Bodies: 0.16mm layer, 2 walls, 10% infill
Incredible work!
0
Reply
lookin good!
0
Reply
Print Profile
Printable Tuning Slide - 0.12mm layer
Fantastic. Works perfectly with the flute.
Show original
1
Reply
Print Profile
Whistle Bodies: 0.16mm layer, 2 walls, 10% infill
Fantastic flute, we are thrilled. It is perfectly functional and beautifully designed. Incidentally, I also printed V1 and had absolutely no seam issues on my P1S. I used the printed version instead of the metal piece. It works great. Unfortunately, we have no idea how to play it properly from sheet music or which notes correspond to which holes. But my two children are overjoyed with it.
Show original
0
Reply
Boosted
Is there a reason why the tuning slide cannot also be 3d printed and incorporated into one of the main parts?
The designer has replied
0
Reply
Because it is physically too weak. I originally designed them this way, and they would occasionally break with just normal use.
1
Reply
I added a profile with a custom .step model for the tuning slide. Should at least work temporarily while people wait for supplies. I have a pipe on the way too.
0
Reply
Replying to @BunnySounds :
Awesome! I shoulda thought of that ;) Good job!
0
Reply
Print Profile
Whistle Bodies: 0.16mm layer, 2 walls, 10% infill
Would like there to be a model for something to connect the two ends of the whistle together. The tone quality might not be as good as a metal tube but something would be better than nothing. Working on creating one that works. If I am successful I will upload the profile.
1
Reply
Someone has already posted a print profile with a 3d printed tuning slide. Check it out!
0
Reply
Replying to @greg.whistler :
awesome will do still very new to the 3D printing scene. I will have to dig around and see what I can find.
0
Reply
Son doing scales, loves it!
0
Reply

License

This user content is licensed under a Standard Digital File License.

You shall not share, sub-license, sell, rent, host, transfer, or distribute in any way the digital or 3D printed versions of this object, nor any other derivative work of this object in its digital or physical format (including - but not limited to - remixes of this object, and hosting on other digital platforms). The objects may not be used without permission in any way whatsoever in which you charge money, or collect fees.

Get Commercial License