Hi Richard. You don't say if you have seen the piano before. I.E. were the pins loose and inconsistant before? Do the clients have replacement value insurance on the piano? If so, go that route and let this be some other persons problem. My own experience includes a Yamaha C7 that had a bottle of beer spilled over the pins and bass strings. The strings went dead of course, twisting revitalized for a time--but the real solution was replacement. The pin block didn't seem as even--and this was pre CA glue. The piano now resides at Brandon University--so perhaps Mark Cramer could "chime in" about it's current condition pinblock wise. Failing replacement value insurance: Clean up the mess Treat the too tight pins with alcohol--not Denatured alcohol (it has oil in it)--but what is sold in Ontaria as "ever clear" treat the too loose pins with CA glue Tune. Sell them an Edwards String cover. At 09:57 PM 21/12/2004 -0500, you wrote: > >1990ish Young Chang G150. >Clients' children took it upon themselves to "dope" the pinblock above the >treble break with a can of pepsi. About 20 tuning pins, string coils and >plate bushings are caked in hardened black syrup. From underneath you can >see how the fluid crept along the top of the block and seeped through from >about C4 up. Some places look worse than other from underneath. The pin >torque is inconsistent from pin to pin from C4 up. About 85% of the pins >are ok, 5% are questionable, and 10 % are either sticky and too tight or >loose. > >What would you do? > >R.Cromwell Regards, Don Rose, B.Mus., A.M.U.S., A.MUS., R.P.T. Non calor sed umor est qui nobis incommodat mailto:pianotuna@accesscomm.ca http://us.geocities.com/drpt1948/ 3004 Grant Rd. REGINA, SK, S4S 5G7 306-352-3620 or 1-888-29t-uner
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