Korean Unison Stability

Joe & Penny Goss imatunr@srvinet.com
Tue, 24 Apr 2001 20:14:39 -0600


Hi Mitch,
You might try a little Goose Juice at the capo bar termination point.
Check on the site below.
Joe Goss
imatunr@srvinet.com
www.mothergoosetools.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "pianolover 88" <pianolover88@hotmail.com>
To: <pianotech@ptg.org>
Sent: Tuesday, April 24, 2001 7:57 PM
Subject: Re: Korean Unison Stability


> >is the
> >fact that all the tri-chords are tied off at the hitch pin individually.
> >Anybody have any insight?  Maybe my pin setting needs work...
> >
> >Mitch Ruth
> >DeMossville, KY
> >www.childrensmusicassociation.com
>
> I service the SKG 600's (and 500's, but these do NOT have individual
> tri-chords) quite often, and find them to tune up beautifully, and the
> individually tied tri-chords are actually MORE stable IMHO. While your pin
> setting may be suspect, it's more likely something else, such as humidity
> flux, or settling and string relaxing if it's relatively a new piano. has
it
> been on a regular tuning schedule? Do you check each unison with a good
> "whack" to the key, to make sure it's solid? After tuning, play some
pieces
> that will "test" the piano using forte passages. If it stands up after
> playing, you've set the pins and strings.
>
> Terry Peterson
> Precision Piano Service
> Torrance, CA
>
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