[CAUT] Mold mitigation

David Skolnik davidskolnik at optonline.net
Thu Jan 10 10:52:47 MST 2013


Greg, James -
Without getting into technical details beyond my immediate knowledge, 
the data seems somewhat incomplete.  I may have missed something, but 
I don't understand the basis for James assumption that the piano 
suffered water damage.  It would be interesting to know the suspected 
cause of the mold, i.e. a water leak, flooding, Humbolt 
climate?  Does he use the piano?  Can the piano be moved to a part of 
the house that he doesn't frequent, to see if that makes a 
difference?  If his condition suddenly improves, that would narrow it 
down a bit.  I would be wary of going immediately the off-site 
'expert evaluation' route, partly for the initial expense (it can't 
be cheap, unless the wife does it herself or knows someone), and then 
question of what to do, based upon the assessment results.  I suppose 
you could move it off-site to do a thorough cleaning (or take it out 
in the back on a sunny day - whenever that might be- and blow it out).

It would be interesting to see (photo) how the house has been 
cleansed without eliminating all elements of comfort.

David Skolnik

At 11:32 AM 1/10/2013, you wrote:
>Greg,
>    Of all the things that are be almost impossible to remove from a 
> piano without rebuilding, mildew and mold are at the top of the 
> list. It is more difficult then smoke and smoke odor  There simply 
> is not a way to clean it out without removing and replacing parts. 
> You have a living organism that is not just sitting there, is is 
> growing  If I were in your place I wold first have the piano 
> removed to a water damage restoration specialist and let is sit in 
> an uncontaminated area for evaluation and then decide the next step 
> from there.  Most of the time you can see it but not 
> always.  Getting the input from some folks that deal with it on a 
> regular basis is helpful.
>Yours
>James Schmitt
>On Jan 9, 2013, at 8:57 AM, Gregory J. Granoff wrote:
>
>>David,
>>I'm not sure what the story is on discovery there, but his wife is 
>>a long time professional allergist, and they have come quite a 
>>distance already in getting rid of all furniture and permeable 
>>surfaces in the house (carpeting, etc.), cleaning, painting, etc., 
>>with no turning back.  I'm not going to say anything about finding 
>>what you tend to look for, if you know what I mean; but he did 
>>develop some pretty unpleasant symptoms when he's in his 
>>house--difficulty regulating body temp, feelings of mild atrophy in 
>>extremities, and mental cloudiness, among others, according to him.
>>The question really is now:  what do with the piano.  He's 
>>aware--assuming that all this other stuff is correct-- that the 
>>piano might need to be replaced entirely, so it isn't a question of 
>>that being do-able if necessary.
>>He just wants to know if that route is the only choice, and if it 
>>isn't, what are the realistic options for the existing piano?
>>Thanks,
>>Greg
>>
>>
>>On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 5:08 AM, David Skolnik 
>><<mailto:davidskolnik at optonline.net>davidskolnik at optonline.net> wrote:
>>Greg -
>>How was the original mold assessment made?  How is the rest of his 
>>house being treated?  Did a reliable expert locate the primary 
>>source, and reason for its presence?
>>
>>David Skolnik
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>At 12:26 PM 1/8/2013, you wrote:
>>>Hello list,
>>>I'm looking for info regarding a customer who has been diagnosed 
>>>with a serious allergy to poisonous mold spores that have 
>>>apparently infected his house.  He asked me whether there was any 
>>>way to treat permeable surfaces such as felt, unfinished wood, 
>>>etc. in pianos for the spores which can lodge there that didn't 
>>>involve replacing everything.  I have no experience with this 
>>>issue at all.  Anybody know?
>>>
>>>Thanks so much in advance for any advice and knowledge!
>>>
>>>Greg Granoff
>>>Humboldt State University
>>>
>>>No virus found in this message.
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>>
>
>No virus found in this message.
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