<oops> for Marshall

pianotune05@comcast.net pianotune05@comcast.net
Mon, 02 Jan 2006 21:31:37 +0000


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Hi Susan,
I'm glad the e-mals are getting through.  Thank you so much for the info.  Are the forks you mentioned a or c forks?  I have a 440 one from Randy Potter's course. I"m a vision impaired tuner, new to the trade I'll admit, but I"ve encountered some interesting stuff with pianos. I did leave a fork at one of my practice tuning, but I went back and it was there waiting fo rme.  

Would you purchase the rosewood extension hammer or the smaller extension hammer?  Have a good one.
Marshall
-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: Susan Kline <skline@peak.org> 
At 08:55 PM 1/2/2006 +0000, you wrote:

this is a test. does thie e-mali show up on the list? I 've sent several and no reply to either of them.  Computers ,I tell you...
Marshall
ps. maybe my questions are too stupid to answer. :)
  

Oops -- the post below was a answer to your enquiry about how to reply. I just 
got confused and called you Rick, the other fellow, who made the New Years 
Resolution ..

Now, as to tips -- you'll probably want to get a #1, #2, and #3. Most 
pianos you meet will have #2 pins, but some old antiques or European 
pianos will have #1's. Some of the extremely old stuff might even be 
smaller than #1, which makes them only marginally tunable with a #2 
tip. For rebuilt pianos with oversized pins, or for pianos where the 
pins have been chewed up in some way or other, the larger #3 will be 
needed. 

Also, get a tip wrench, so you can change them. You put the tip wrench 
in your tuning hammer, with the wrench lying flat on the floor and 
the tuning hammer handle sticking up. You stand on the wrench, and 
then give some sharp tugs to the hammer handle to free up the tip. They 
get very firmly threaded on after a little bit of use. 

What style of head you get is largely a matter of personal preference. 
I prefer a short head with a steep angle. 

There are a few specialty items which might be nice to have on hand, 
since when you need them you really need them, and there is seldom time 
to get them. 

Just in case you feel adventurous, and are faced with a square grand, 
you might want to have an oblong tip. There's an extender thingee which 
Schaff sells, for tuning pins which are too close to plate struts. It has a 
screw thread for mounting a tip, and the other end is shaped like a tuning pin. 
I leave the oblong tip installed on it. Then I can move it from pin to 
pin on a square grand, and tune it with my normal hammer. If the oblong 
tip were installed on my normal hammer directly, I would only have two 
angles where it engaged the tuning pin, but by using the extender, I 
have the usual 8, because I'm using the normal star tip. 

Also, it doesn't hurt to have a harpsichord lever or T-hammer in your kit. 
It also works on zithers. 

There will come the day (don't ask me how I know ...) when you will manage 
to leave a tuning fork in a piano. (If you're an aural tuner, at least.) 
Duplicates of all basic tuning tools, kept in the car somewhere 
other than your kit, is a good idea. And of course stringing things and 
a full assortment of treble wire. In Indiana in the summer, you'll want to 
figure out a way to keep it dry.

If you tune aurally, you might consider two unusual forks: a 435, for very 
old pianos, which were designed for 435, and a 442, just in case somebody 
who plays at that pitch in orchestra wants it. I use them once in a blue 
moon. 

Susan

-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: Susan Kline <skline@peak.org> 


> At 08:31 PM 1/2/2006 +0000, you wrote: 
> >When replying to the list, do I hit reply all or just reply? 
> 
> Hi, Rick 
> 
> Just hit "reply" -- but then, also check the "To:" line of your 
> new post. It sometimes automatically puts an individual's address 
> there, with the pianotech one afterwards. If I remember to look, 
> I always delete the individual's address, so my reply goes only 
> to the list. Otherwise, people get confused about whether or not 
> we're writing in public. 
> 
> If I wish to reply off-list to anyone, I always open a new message, 
> and paste the address in, instead of clicking on "reply". Too 
> many times "private" responses with "OFF LIST!!" in the subject 
> line! show up in pianotech. 
> 
> Susan 
> 
> _______________________________________________ 
> pianotech list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives 
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