humidity control in concert pianos

Jeff Tanner jtanner@mozart.sc.edu
Fri, 10 Oct 2003 14:28:24 -0400


How do you hide the unsightly cords during performance, or expect 
others who move the pianos to do it correctly?  Or protect cords from 
damage by those who aren't considering cords when the piano is pulled 
out for use?  It is unreasonable to expect me to be here 24-7 to move 
the pianos.

Our situation may or may not be unique, but our most used piano is 
"stored" in concert position, so having cords draped across the stage 
at all times would not be acceptable.  Our "piano closets" did not turn 
out to be useful for storing pianos for both climactic and logistical 
reasons, so both pianos are kept onstage at all times, and the piano 
closets have become storage for music stands, choral risers, 
chalkboard, lecture podium, etc.

You can see here how our pianos are stored, except that the piano is 
uncovered for the picture:
http://www.music.sc.edu/Facilities/RecitalVR.html
(cut and paste to your browser - this new mail program is supposed to 
automatically paste as a link but it's not doing it)

You can click on the picture and drag it around to see the hall. (This 
is cool.  I didn't know until just now we had this.)  Piano closets are 
the double doors on each side of the stage.  You can also see our wind 
tunnel (HVAC return vent) to the right of the organ where someone 
occasionally leaves a piano when their event requires a full stage 
without piano.  The 2nd piano is to the left of the organ.
Jeff


On Friday, October 10, 2003, at 11:25 AM, Don wrote:

> Hi Jeff,
>
> I've changed the thread.
>
> That's very simple to arrange. Take a rechargeable emergency 
> flashlight,
> replace the bulb with a buzzer and splice it into the power cord of 
> the DC
> unit. When the unit is unplugged it will buzz for about 20 minutes. 
> Trust
> me--they will plug it in! I'd really appreciate the DC people including
> this as an optional "add on".
>
> A refinement to this would be to use one of the many uninteruptible 
> power
> supplies that are used on computers--I do think this is overkill--but 
> I'd
> do it in a flash if I could purchase a unit where the "beep" could be
> turned off for concerts--there would then be no cords needed during a
> performance.
>
> The local University concert venue's here have DC units on the two 
> pianos
> used for that purpose.
>
>
> At 10:55 AM 10/10/2003 -0400, you wrote:
>> If he's like us, there is no way to expect to keep one plugged in on a
>> concert instrument.
>> Jeff
>>
>> On Friday, October 10, 2003, at 08:35 AM, Don wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Eric,
>>>
>>> Why no hope of a DC system with bottom cover?
>>>
>>> At 10:12 AM 10/10/2003 -0400, you wrote:
>>>>  to dry out it reverts a devilish false beat capo noise monster.
>>> Unfortunately, most of the concerts are during the dry months and
>>> there is
>>> no hope of any climate control.
>>>> Eric Wolfley
>>>
>>> Regards,
>>> Don Rose, B.Mus., A.M.U.S., A.MUS., R.P.T.
>>>
>>> mailto:pianotuna@accesscomm.ca
>>> http://us.geocities.com/drpt1948/
>>>
>>> 3004 Grant Rd.
>>> REGINA, SK
>>> S4S 5G7
>>> 306-352-3620 or 1-888-29t-uner
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> caut list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives
>>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> caut list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives
>>
>>
>
> Regards,
> Don Rose, B.Mus., A.M.U.S., A.MUS., R.P.T.
>
> mailto:pianotuna@accesscomm.ca
> http://us.geocities.com/drpt1948/
>
> 3004 Grant Rd.
> REGINA, SK
> S4S 5G7
> 306-352-3620 or 1-888-29t-uner
> _______________________________________________
> caut list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives
>


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