Striking point

William R. Monroe pianotech at a440piano.net
Fri May 30 07:31:37 MDT 2008


Sounds like Paul has it.  Thanks for bringing that up, Paul.  Probably should have been our first thought since the piano had been dropped.

If the keybed was cracked and moved during the fall, that's where you need to start.  The keybed position must be correct before you go fooling with voicing.

Why did you "remove" the strings to fix the coils?  Just to apply DAG?  Many rebuilders feel that DAG is utterly unnecessary excepting if you are trying to cover up an ugly bridge cap.  Putting DAG on the bridge had no effect on the richness of tone.  It is either psychoacoustic effects you are experiencing, or whatever changes the strings went through in the removal/re-installation process.

William R. Monroe


  SNIP

  The keybed however shifted drastically and cracked, my guess is I will have to make a new one which I'm looking foreward to doing. the action brackets seem to be ok but everything is out of order since the fall!
  Since the crack of keybed "shift" doesnt work too well either, yeah this piano has a grand shift to mute the sound. I noticed one interesting thing about the tone Paul, I took off all the strings to correct the coils, and while thery were off, I applied a layer of DAG on it (the bridge was naked before), and that made the tone so much richer. Any thoughts?
   
  Alicia

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