[CAUT] stack fit to keyframe

John Delacour JD at Pianomaker.co.uk
Wed Sep 13 18:23:20 MDT 2006


At 5:01 pm -0600 13/9/06, Fred Sturm wrote:

>Quite right. I should have added "in current production." Ron Overs 
>is the first to point out that Herrberger "went there first" in 
>regards to knuckle/jack being on the convergence line. Ron's action 
>has several additional features.

I must say I find most of them superfluous and some of them based on 
false premises, but let that pass.  The action on the Roger's piano 
that he refers to in the patent specs, presuming it is the same as 
that found on pre-1914 Lipps, will be essentially the same but with a 
10mm roller fixed about 17mm from the hammer-centre.  In the original 
version, which I illustrated, the knuckle is equivalent to a roller 
fixed 20mm from the centre, so that rather colours his claims in that 
respect.

>     BTW, I like that felt on the jack tender, rather than on the 
>letoff button. Prohibitively expensive to make, but a nice feature, 
>IMO.

Yes indeed.  In fact the jack tender button is felt covered with 
buckskin, as is the lever-bottom.  The set-off screw is nickel-plated 
brass (still available), so the rolling action combined with the very 
low coefficient of friction between the radiussed polished metal 
surface and the buckskin means that the parts remain maintenance-free 
practically for ever.  The action I took for the pattern for my 
drawing/movie is from an 1899 Lipp 6'9" grand in my possession, 19 
years younger than the one demonstrated on Stephen Birkett's site:
<http://real.uwaterloo.ca/~sbirkett/lipp_info.htm>,
which probably has a Keller action.

The piano of my childhood was a 5'9" Lipp grand with the same action, 
so for me it has always been THE action and without it I might not be 
in the piano business!  Herrburger-Schwander in Paris was, of course, 
the first and the greatest of action makers and Joseph Herrburger 
designed far more actions than ever reached the patent office -- I 
imagine he had better things to do with his time and money!  Even the 
Schwander B action which dominated the market till the mid 1980's ( 
Bechstein, Bösendorfer, Kawai etc. etc.) was never patented so far as 
I can tell.  It would be interesting to know why all the makers 
suddenly switched back to the old Herz design within a space of a 
couple of years -- or does Bösendorfer still fit the Schwander?



But my old action is a far better design than this and it's hard to 
understand why it was not more widely used.  Herrburger retired in 
1900 at the age of 68 according to Dolge, so this action will 
probably have been his last.  Factory fires and wars and old age 
probably combine to explain which models survived and flourished, 
irrespective of merit.

JD






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