Hi Mike, Couldn't get an image to come up, but yes , that is the situation. Is it norman to have that 1-2 mm piece of wood at the front with the ivory front glued to it? Couldn't I just remove the whole piece with the ivory still attached and glue on a new front? It may end up being a couple mm more in distance from the keyslip, but I don't think that would be a problem. -------------- Original message from "MICHAEL MORVAN" <keymaestro at verizon.net>: -------------- Rick, If the problem you are having is the same as the picture below than the options are few. The front peels forward with the ivory attached to it, and after years of play, crud gets stuck behind it and the oils from fingers usually penetrate the wood and prevent it from reattaching even with a proper clamp and glue. Heat the fronts with an iron and try to scrape them off without damaging the surface then apply new ones. Good Luck, Mike Michael A. Morvan Blackstone Valley Piano Dedicated To Advancing The Art Of Keyboard Restoration 76 Sutton Street Uxbridge, Ma. 01569 (508) 278-9762 Keymaestro at verizon.net www.pianoandorgankeys.com www.thepianorebuilders.com ----- Original Message ----- From: richard.ucci at att.net To: pianotech at ptg.org Sent: Sunday, March 02, 2008 12:05 PM Subject: steinway keys Hi folks, I'm working on a Steinway grand ca:1911. The keyfronts are pulling away from the top, sort of curving out towards the front like this (. They also seem to be comprised of a 1-2 mm separate piece of wood glued to the keystick with the front glued to it. Should I pull all of them off and just go with new keyfronts ? The fronts seem to be ivory, but are cracking. Thanks, Rick Ucci/Ucci Piano -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/20080302/e572bd3c/attachment.html
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