Strip Muting/unisons

Jerry Hunt piano_tunertx@yahoo.com
Thu, 27 Jan 2000 15:40:03 -0800 (PST)


You insert the strip mute above the dampers. Then
press on the damper pedal, push the strip down, you
may have to also pull back on several dampers at once
with one hand while pushing the strip down with the
other. When you're done, the dampers sit on the strip.

--- Graeme Harvey <gharvey@netsource.co.nz> wrote:
> Roger,
> I've just come in on this thread, somehow missed the
> start.
> How do you strip mute the treble section? Do you
> slip the action forward or
> what? I strip up to about C5 (52) at which point I
> run out of space above
> the hammerline. I'm just curious. I was taught by
> two tuners in the workshop
> I spent my early years in, one used single mute and
> the other strip muted
> the temperament only.
> These days I strip mute down to last bichord.
> 
> Of course there isn't any reason why using your
> method you could fit both
> strips simultaneously, (below the hammer / damper
> line above say A4 ) tune
> the centre strings, then simply pull out one strip
> leaving the other in
> place covering every other outside string. This
> makes sense only if you are
> removing the action to mute in the first place.
> 
> Graeme Harvey
> New Plymouth NZ
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Roger C Hayden <rchayden2@juno.com>
> To: <pianotech@ptg.org>
> Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2000 7:37 PM
> Subject: Re: Strip Muting/unisons
> 
> 
> > I like strip muting and whole step tuning, too.  I
> discovered it while
> > doing time/motion studies on the fastest method of
> tuning (for me).  The
> > stop watch told me what was quicker.
> > Strip muting the whole piano, leaving the middle
> string singing, and then
> > tuning all them I found quick.
> >
> > Then strip muting again every other unison,
> leaving the middle string and
> > one outside (out of tune) string singing let me
> set these strings in
> > next, doing them by whole steps, because getting
> to the end of several
> > short trips seems psychologically so much easier
> than one long tedious
> > trip.
> >
> > Then I pull the strip out and tune the other set
> of outside strings,
> > again working in whole steps.  I found this much
> faster, because I can
> > strip mute a whole piano in under two minutes,
> which doesn't compare with
> > handling a rubber mute upwards of 200 times.
> >
> > And I agree that whole steps seem to keep the ear
> fresher, and when in
> > the treble undampered strings, a note that
> continues to sustain a whole
> > step away from where you are now tuning doesn't
> seem to interfere as
> > much.
> >
> > The psychological element of whole step tuning is
> critical.  I, too
> > average five tunings a day, have done seven
> tunings many times, and a
> > couple of days, ten.  Chromatic scales are very
> intense to listen to.  Ed
> > Pettingill, who taught me much twenty years ago,
> found tuning to be very
> > nerve racking.  I do not.  Ed used rubber mutes
> and chromatic sequencing.
> > (Of course he's also a violist.)
> >
> > Roger Hayden, RPT
> >
> 
> 
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