[CAUT] Overlap churches?

Elwood Doss edoss@utm.edu
Wed, 25 Jan 2006 14:29:14 -0600


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Hi Dan,

Thanks for the suggestions!  They are good!

Joy!

Elwood

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From: caut-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf Of
dan l tassin
Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2006 3:37 PM
To: caut@ptg.org
Subject: [CAUT] Overlap churches?

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Hi,  Elwood,

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Use the PTG pamplets.  They are the BEST guides you can put into your
customer's hands.

I also have written a "little"  guide that I hand to each and every
piano customer of mine explaining the design,

make up, stress, etc., etc., that happens and is going on  CONSTANLY  in
their piano.   Once they

understand WHAT is happening with their piano, in and around the
enviroment, they come to reason.

I tell them,  " My tuning your piano twice a year is like an  insurance
policy.  You take care of your piano,

which  IS  an instrument, NOT a piece of furniture, and it will take
care of you."   It's the "nature"  of the design.

NO way around it.   ( well,  buy a keyboard,  but I  DON'T tell them
that.  I like my  "job security")  With the

"Up Beat"  Christian (song) movement now days in churches,  they find
out more about "KEYBOARDS"

own their own  than what best for  "their own good."    Well,  enough
said.

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Use the PTG Pamphlets.

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Get the pamplets from the PTG Stores.   Goto the web-site.  You know it.
www.ptg.org  =20

They are WORTH  the money spent to give to your customers to encourage
re-tunings.   I like to give them

a "visual" and I tell them,  " You can afford to have your piano tuned
at least once a year, every year,  IF you

put two (2) dollars a week in a Jar, every week for  52 weeks."
They'll figure that out, and say,  "  You charge

$104.00 dollars to tune a piano ??  Gee, that a lot !! "   I say, " no,
I don't, but you'll have a little extra for repairs

if something breaks, or you have an accident with the piano, and break
it yourself."        " Oh,  yeah, you're right ..."

Double that, and you can have it tuned twice a year,  which is what you
as a piano owner -- SHOULD do.

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I hope it helps, Elwood.    " Give 'em Heaven !! "    ( that's what I
started saying instead of  ' give 'em H__L.'  Nobody

needs that.   I don't. )   Ha !!  just being funny.   Remember ??   "
Give 'em H__L,  Harry."   ( from the Truman days.)

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Best to ya's,

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Danny Tassin, RPT

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On Tue, 24 Jan 2006 22:28:14 -0600 "Elwood Doss" <edoss@utm.edu> writes:

	Good question!  I service a number of churches and try to get
them to tune on a regular basis.  I'd be interested in some type of
guideline for churches...something I could show the senior pastor or
music minister/organ master/choir director.  At one church the lay
person who arranged for me to come by and tune their pianos had passed
along the message to have the air conditioning set at the temperature it
is set when they worship.  While I was tuning, the lady minister walked
in the sanctuary and asked me if I was comfortable.  It took me a minute
or so to understand what she was talking about and I finally commented
that the temperature needed to be set for the tuning, not for my
comfort.  She exclaimed that she thought I just wanted to be comfortable
when I tuned.  I assured her that it was a bit cool for me, but just
right for the piano!

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	I tuned a piano in a small rural church a couple of weeks before
Christmas several years ago.  They turn their heating way down during
the week and turn it back up for their service only on Sunday morning.
I received a call from the mother of the pianist in January that the
piano was out of tune.  She said her son said it sounded terrible the
previous Sunday.  I arranged to meet with him later in the week and when
I walked in, the temperature was cool, but comfortable-about what it was
when I tuned the piano-and the piano sounded great!  I thought either my
hearing is going or that piano sounds just fine.  About halfway down the
aisle the pianist heard me and exclaimed that the piano sounded great!
He said it sounded terrible Sunday.  I asked him what the temperature in
the sanctuary was like on the previous Sunday and he said it was about
like it was then, but when the "old folks" came in they turned the
thermostat way up!  Problem solved!  It's amazing what a small
increase/decrease in the temperature and resulting humidity makes as far
as a piano being in tune.

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	Joy!

	Elwood

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	Elwood Doss, Jr., RPT

	Piano Technician/Technical Director

	Department of Music

	145 Fine Arts Building

	The University of Tennessee at Martin

	Martin, TN  38238

	731/881-1852

	FAX: 731/881-7415

	HOME: 731/587-5700

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	From: caut-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces@ptg.org] On
Behalf Of Cy Shuster
	Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2006 9:17 PM
	To: CAUT
	Subject: [CAUT] Overlap of CAUT with churches?

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	It seems that the mission of CAUT overlaps substantially with
the requirements of churches: maintaining pianos in an institutional
setting (rather than individually owned) -- although I doubt many
churches have a full-time tech.

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	Churches have been a big part of my business.  They have
performance and rehearsal pianos, and have unusual environmental
problems, going through seasonal heating/cooling cycles twice a week or
more rather than twice a year.

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	Are there specific guidelines for churches?

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	--Cy Shuster--
	Boston, MA

	www.shusterpiano.com
	North Bennet Street School
	Class of '06

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