wurly juice (wantin,,)

Pianoman pianoman at accessus.net
Thu Jul 19 07:19:10 MDT 2007


I had used the combinations many times dating to the late 1960's.  I have 
found no residual problems at all.
James
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----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Joel A. Jones" <jajones2 at wisc.edu>
To: "Pianotech List" <pianotech at ptg.org>
Sent: Thursday, July 19, 2007 8:01 AM
Subject: wurly juice (wantin,,)


> list,
> This thread sets off my memory searching for the mixture of silicone and
> xxxxx that the Wurlitzer service dept. poured on the actions for lube. 
> The
> silicone came in a can and there was a recipe for mixing in other 
> ingredients
> for this lube.  I can see the service team pouring it out of a squeeze 
> bottle
> with the action out of the piano setting on it's side.  We pour it on....
>
> What I'm wondering about this situation is the residual effects of the
> Wurly Juice formula and whether it is causing the gunk in the bushing
> at this time.
>
> Any memories of this treatment ?
>
> Joel
>
> Joel Jones, RPT
> Madison, WI
>
> On Jul 19, 2007, at 7:03 AM, John Formsma wrote:
>
>> I also find lots of Wurlies with tight wippen centers. We're talking
>> 8-10 grams at least, and gunk in the bushing.
>>
>> Have tried alcohol/water, which has not worked so well, but it does on
>> a few such wippens. Protek/Goose Juice might work on some that don't
>> have that much friction.  Repinning is the guaranteed solution, and
>> you'll be getting pretty good by the end of that job. ;-)
>>
>> JF
>>
>> On 7/19/07, Dean May <deanmay at pianorebuilders.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Hey Steven
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I usually try the Protek or Goose Juice first. It's easy and I keep a 
>>> hypo
>>> oiler of it right in my tool kit.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> A used Wurly console, eh? They can be troublesome. I've had several of 
>>> those
>>> where the problem was too much friction in the whippen pin. Some 
>>> responded
>>> to Protek, some needed repining.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Note which keys are particularly troublesome. Take the action out, 
>>> remove
>>> that whippen, and test the flange for tightness. Apply Protek and see if 
>>> it
>>> frees up. If it works, go ahead and lubricate all of them. Just turn the
>>> action upside down and squirt along the whippen pin joints.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> If it doesn't free up I'm afraid you'll have to do some re-pinning. 
>>> Although
>>> you might try alcohol treatment first. I've never done it, but others 
>>> have
>>> good success. Search the archives.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Lay the action on the dampers and then lube all of the jack flanges.
>>> Finally, do the hammer flanges.
>>> ---------------------------
>>>
>>> Dean
>>>
>>> Dean May             cell 812.239.3359
>>>
>>> PianoRebuilders.com   812.235.5272
>>>
>>> Terre Haute IN  47802
>>>
>>>  ________________________________
>>>
>>>
>>> From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On 
>>> Behalf
>>> Of Steven Hopp
>>>  Sent: Wednesday, July 18, 2007 11:52 PM
>>>  To: pianotech at ptg.org
>>>  Subject: RE: Wanting to do it right
>>> ----------------------------------------------
>>>
>>>   When might a lubricant i.e.
>>> protech be used vs. re=pining?  Would your advice for the key culprit be 
>>> any
>>> different knowing the piano was used?  Again Thanks
>>>
>>> Steven
>>>
>>>
>>
>
> 




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