Yes, "Blessing Williams" is an alleged scammer, but......

David Ilvedson ilvey at sbcglobal.net
Tue Jun 17 13:53:25 MDT 2008


I'm sure it has nothing to do with that scam your running...;-]

David Ilvedson, RPT
Pacifica, CA  94044

----- Original message ----------------------------------------
From: "Ron Nossaman" <rnossaman at cox.net>
To: lclgcnp at yahoo.com, "Pianotech List" <pianotech at ptg.org>
Received: 6/17/2008 10:42:21 AM
Subject: Re: Yes, "Blessing Williams" is an alleged scammer, but......




>> how someone could pull off such a scam with a 500 pound
>> piano remains somewhat mysterious. I guess they'd just
>> expect me to send the amount above the sale price to
>> "wherever", then not actually arrange to have it
>> shipped....... Euphonious Thumpe
>> 
>> 
>> --- On Tue, 6/17/08, Ron Nossaman <rnossaman at cox.net>
>> wrote:
>> 
>>> From: Ron Nossaman <rnossaman at cox.net> Subject: Re:
>>> Original pin block To: "Pianotech List"
>>> <pianotech at ptg.org> Date: Tuesday, June 17, 2008, 12:11
>>> PM
>>>> Sorting the pins as you mention I think is a good idea.
>>>> 
>>> I wonder. I'd bet nobody sorted the original pins, and 
>>> there was likely more variation in size then than with 
>>> today's cut thread pins (as I recall from micing rolled
>>> thread pins 30 years ago). So the existing holes are
>>> neither uniform, nor calibrated bass to treble. Sorting
>>> pins could well lessen the probability of putting an
>>> undersized pin in an oversize hole in the bass, but in as
>>> soft a block as Steinway's, I'd think it's a boarder line
>>> return.
>>> 
>>> Ok, I'll quit observing now and go back to work. Ron N


>And my utterly unrelated post is tacked onto the back of this
>why?

>Ron N?


More information about the Pianotech mailing list

This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC