tune, chip with oversized pins?

J Patrick Draine jpdraine at gmail.com
Mon Mar 24 14:21:57 MST 2008


Dan,You can see from other replies that a more detailed description of the
piano and its deficits, will result in more meaningful answers.
Patrick Draine

On Mon, Mar 24, 2008 at 11:39 AM, daniel carlton <hacicspe at gmail.com> wrote:

> hi all
>
> i looked for about thirty minutes in the archives for info on this topic,
> but i didn't find an answer and i didn't want to wade through 336 more
> results from google...
> i'm drawing up an estimate for someone and i need to know how many tunings
> to include.
> so i'm looking in the "G" piano works labor guide for installing an entire
> set of oversized pins, and it says it includes one tuning. now i guess i can
> understand only needing a tuning and maybe a pitch adjust if you replace and
> pull up-to-pitch one pin at a time as you go. but it seems that
> one-atta-time is slower than all-at-once gang style.
> if you replaced all the pins gang style, you'd need to chip and tune a
> few times right?
> i think the question i need answered most is if i do it one at a time,
> which i can do pretty quickly, is the tuning going to end up pretty close to
> pitch when I'm done?
>
> thanks all
>
> daniel carlton
>
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