after ring

Vincent E. Mrykalo mrykalve@potsdam.edu
Tue, 14 Jan 2003 08:57:36 -0400


Plus the fact that yeows, etc. do seem to help the sound away from 
the piano (listening to it in the audience).  And then there are 
those "tuned" duplex things (e.g. Fazioli)that can be a little much 
even out in the audience.

>
>I don't DO this, but I have DONE it. Take the example of the dull 
>sounding B. How much time would you like to spend trying to 
>eliminate a nasty duplex sound on one isolated note in a piano that 
>generally sounds that bad? In my case, not much, and I don't carry 
>"white" glue. For the most part, the sundry duplex whistles, doinks, 
>shrieks, and yeows get ignored if there are no specific complaints.
>
>Ron N
>
>_______________________________________________
>caut list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives


-- 
Vince Mrykalo RPT MPT
Senior Piano Technician
Crane School of Music

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