1969 Steinway L CBS?

Farrell mfarrel2@tampabay.rr.com
Sun, 12 May 2002 20:01:04 -0400


Such talk. Tisk, tisk. Can't you get off your high horse and see this as one of "many faults in each one that can be discovered and cherished over the years?"

Terry Farrell

P.S. I am sorry. I know this is not constructive. I could not resist. I am ready to put this to bed. (Now that I have had the last word!)     :-)
  
----- Original Message ----- 
From: <A440A@AOL.COM>
To: <pianotech@ptg.org>
Sent: Sunday, May 12, 2002 7:44 PM
Subject: Re: 1969 Steinway L CBS?


> Dale wrote: 
> > I also appreciate your comments on  S&S from your  largely impartial and
> > introspective point of view. I hope the company doesn't cook there own
> >goose  with the objections I'm hearing from many.
> 
>      Well, I don't know what they are thinking, but I have a question to ask 
> to all the "Steinway experienced" among us.   Am I the only one finding 
> damaged front pins in the new pianos?  is anybody out there looking for them? 
>  Anybody out there wondering why the keybushings on some notes are noisey 
> after the first year of play? Out of the six new grands purchased by 
> Vanderbilt last year, EVERY ONE of them had at least 20 damaged front pins. 
> This is due to the the key spacer being used above the punchings.  This was a 
> problem I contacted them about several years ago when I was asked to examine 
> several new pianos before private purchasers would take them. They paid me to 
> repin them then, and they have paid to repin them now.   How hard would it be 
> to go to the line, and remove the sharp edged tool from whatever careless 
> worker is using it?  
>     
>    Of more concern to me as a tuner has been the increasing torque on the 
> tuning pins.  Anybody can absolutely prevent loose pin problems by 
> excessively tight pins.  That is what Baldwin has been doing for years, and I 
> have heard from numerous techs that that is why they don't recommend Baldwin 
> pianos, they don't want to tune them!  
>      There is no need at all for the pins in the top octave to be tighter 
> than those in the bass, yet I have measured over 175 inch/lbs on some of 
> these, and I consider that an artless job of block/pin drilling.  Where is 
> the finesse?  
> Regards, 
> Ed Foote RPT 
> 


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