[CAUT] existing pinblock prep

David Ilvedson ilvey at sbcglobal.net
Thu Jul 24 15:06:41 MDT 2008


That's hard to believe?  Unless they were actually turning in one turn at time and coming back later for another turn, the heat has got to be significantly more than driving.   Driving in a little and coming back to drive more would be much more efficient, imho...but what do I know.   Is this an urban legend?

 

David Ilvedson, RPT

Pacifica, CA 94044







Original message

From: "Jim Busby" 

To: "College and University Technicians" 

Received: 7/24/2008 10:57:44 AM

Subject: Re: [CAUT] existing pinblock prep





Fred,



According to someone, somewhere
 Yamaha factory technicians tout the method of screwing in pins rather than driving them in, for their upper range grands, supposedly again, at a slow rate so as to not heat them up.  I can’t remember the source of this, but it just seemed germane to the topic and supports what you said.



Jim Busby BYU



From: caut-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Fred Sturm

Sent: Thursday, July 24, 2008 11:39 AM

To: College and University Technicians

Subject: Re: [CAUT] existing pinblock prep



On Jul 24, 2008, at 10:42 AM, David Brown wrote:







Re gun brushing- Sometimes when going from # 2 to # 3 pins in a piano where the torque levels are adequate ( 90 – 120 inch lbs , say ) the # 3’s can end up a little tight



            My own attitude in this situation is why change pins? I do most of my restringing at the university using the same pins (removing old strings from them, and attaching new strings to them, same techniques as replacing an individual string, but mass produced). I only change to a new, larger sized pin when torque has become an issue for tuning stability. Reusing existing pins requires a different technique for restringing, but I find that, all things considered, it is probably a bit faster than changing pins.

            Just another perspective. It does prolong the useful life of the pinblock as well.



Regards,

Fred Sturm

University of New Mexico

fssturm at unm.edu
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