[CAUT] Steinway extra-bore-length

Barbara Richmond piano57 at comcast.net
Fri Jun 4 08:31:51 MDT 2010


This would be a sort of fun high-speed camera video--nice and up close--to see how the felt reacts with the different techniques. Who's got the camera? 

Barbara Richmond, RPT 
near Peoria, Illinois 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Fred Sturm" <fssturm at unm.edu> 
To: "College & University Technicians" <caut at ptg.org> 
Sent: Friday, June 4, 2010 9:19:54 AM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central 
Subject: Re: [CAUT] Steinway extra-bore-length 

On Jun 3, 2010, at 10:54 PM, David Love wrote: 

> With respect to the question of more or less tearing with a fast or 
> slow stroke all I can say is when I get a flue shot every year I 
> think there's a reason that they employ the stab rather than the 
> press method and I'm not sorry that they do. 


But that is in line with a stab cutting more readily. The quick stab 
breaks the skin surface and some muscle underneath, and the needle 
penetrates. Press, and the skin indents and nerves are activated. The 
skin is a "solid" surface and needs to be cut to be penetrated. 
A hammer, OTOH, is a bunch of fibers with air space in between 
(unless it is ridiculously too densely pressed), and we want the 
needle to go in the space between fibers and spread them rather than 
cut them. That is what adds to the resilience, the bounce of the 
hammer. The fibers are (generally) stiffly joined in an array, and 
need to be loosened up, like a pair of jeans dried on the line. The 
less destructively we can do this, the better, or so I picture it - 
and experience seems to bear this out, both in longevity and tonal 
results. 
Regards, 
Fred Sturm 
fssturm at unm.edu 
http://www.youtube.com/fredsturm 

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