Susan, I service a church that did the void where the piano sits. The building has been in use only one year, but the results seem to be worth the effort in planning. The rebuilt Mason is stable with no sbdb problem. They also will add a full DC system when $$ are in the budget. Your suggestion is workable. Joel Madison. Wi ------Original Message------ From: Susan Kline Sender: caut-bounces at ptg.org To: caut at ptg.org ReplyTo: caut at ptg.org Subject: Re: [CAUT] FW: Re: crack Sent: Jun 24, 2009 7:51 AM >Depending on how it is installed, it may not be as bad for an upright that >is against the wall. Sometimes the coils are not extended all the way to >the walls and an upright just misses sitting directly over them. Hi, Jeannie Perhaps that might indicate it would be a good idea for people installing radiant floor heating (or building a house using it) to leave a coil-free grand-piano-sized area in the living room or music room where they plan to put an instrument. Susan > Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device from U.S. Cellular
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