Here are procedures for making certain that the sostenuto mechanism is ready for concert use, edited together from comments by myself, Jim Busby, Jon Page, and Fred Sturm. This is put together for my benefit, so that when I forget all this within a few months, I will have this material to review. Thanks! Dampers must be in good regulation, and all dampers must seat properly. The damper upstop rail must be regulated perfectly. [FS] With flashlight well placed, looking at in/out position of the sostenuto rod, but also at whether the sostenuto pedal is well adjusted, with damper pedal at rest, depress the sostenuto pedal fully. Is the blade horizontal or nearly so? How much does it overlap the tabs? Get a second perspective by first depressing the damper pedal, then the sostenuto pedal. How much does the blade overlap the tabs?. Does it raise the dampers the same as the damper pedal? more? less? This can lead you to whether you need to take up lost motion, adjust the stop felt, and tell you about in/out position. [FS] The Steinway rod can be adjusted with action in to a large extent, except raising the rod. You can usually get at the screws and loosen them enough to jar the rod forward or backward a bit, then tighten and try again. And you can tap downwards to bend the brass brackets to lower the rod. [FS] Raise the dampers (press the pedal) just enough so that the tabs are even with the sostenuto rod at rest, IOW even with the round part of the rod. Get your eye vertical over the gap between the tabs and rod and look at the gap (move the flashlight from section to section). Is the gap sufficient (so that there won't be occasional "hangers"), but minimal, about 1-1.5 mm? Is the gap even? This tells you a lot about the in/out position of the rod, and about the evenness of the line of tabs in that plane. Tabs that are obviously out of line can be slightly adjusted from above (without removing the stack), with judicious use of a slim bladed screwdriver, pressed against the bottom of the wire/top of the top flange. [FS] It's a good idea to note whether dampers are lifted the same from the keys as from the pedal. If there is late timing, and the dampers lift less from the keys, you may run into trouble of dampers not catching consistently. [JB] Check the obvious “normal” use of the pedal. Play groups, chords, etc. You can see if they lift too far, and if it works well here, that’s a start. Depress damper pedal. While continuing to hold the damper pedal, depress the sostenuto pedal. While continuing to hold down the sostenuto pedal down, release the damper pedal. All dampers should remain raised. (This is a more severe test than depressing each key, then depressing the sostenuto pedal, and releasing the key to see that the damper stays raised.) [JB] Eric S. says that for this first test it’s important to release the dampers slowly (after being held by the sos pedal) and the dampers should “fall like rain” randomly from every section. If most of one section falls before another you have a problem. Depess sostenuto pedal. While continuing to hold the sostenuto pedal down, depress the damper pedal. While continuing to hold the damper pedal down, release the sostenuto pedal. The immediate flipping of tabs should make a noticeable sound as the blade returns to its rest position. (If the blade is held too tightly in its mounting brackets, there might be an inappropriate delay in the return of the blade to its rest position. The tabs should not be able to keep the blade from returning to its rest position.) Depress and release the damper pedal. Depress the sostenuto pedal; no dampers should rise. In addition, there should be no noise resulting from slight contact between the blades and the tabs of any dampers. If noise is heard from the blade contacting tabs as the sostenuto pedal is depressed, you may need to rest your finger on each damper in succession while depressing the sostenuto pedal to find the damper tabs that are makding contact with the blade. [JP] No downwards pressure here; lightly rest your finger so as not to press the tab lower. [FS] You can learn more. Press the damper pedal a very slight bit, and work the sostenuto pedal. FInd out how much you need to lift the dampers with the damper pedal before the blade starts catching against tabs. There should be a little bit of safety factor, but very little. Then work backwards from the top. Damper pedal fully depressed, press the sostenuto. It should catch all. Damper pedal not quite fully depressed, press the sostenuto pedal. FInd how much safety factor there is in this direction. In any of these tests, you don't want to jam on the sostenuto pedal, just a light touch to see when and where you get rubbing contact, or from above, when there starts to be jamming. This can also tell you what sections might be different from others (which sections catch first from below, which from above), all of which tells you where you might want to raise or lower the rod. And it tells you how even the tab line is horizontally, if there are several that behave markedly differently from the others (catch much earlier, while the others are missed). Depress and continue to hold down the sostenuto pedal. Deliver a double-forte blow to every note that has a damper. All dampers must return to their rest positions on the strings as each note is released. (This is a particularly severe test. This test may fail if the sostenuto pedal is not depressed as far as is possible.) [JP] depress the note and and lift the damper head with your other hand to see if you can force the tab to 'cheat'. Pull straight up on the damper. If you flex the damper wire, you'll get false positives and/or false negatives. [JP] I have found that a visual inspection of blade insertion onto the tabs at the ends and aligning them with a straight edge (fore& aft / up & down) precludes slipping tabs. A light source from a flexible goose neck works well.
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