Bass end "rattle" on S&S "D" Being prepped for Brickman Concert SOLVED! Question about Steinway Rebuilder

Michael Magness IFixPianos at yahoo.com
Fri Sep 26 07:26:59 MDT 2008


Many thanks to all for your excellent and timely advice.
 It turned out to be the very first suggestion from Ed Foote amplified by
suggestions from Fred Sturm.
I was still convinced it was a rib/soundboard problem so I used the palette
knife test from underneath as Ed Sutton had described but could find no
loose areas anywhere. That test will remain in my arsenal for the future
however.
I climbed out from underneath and probed with the long palatte knife under
the bridge and there was that opening, I placed a wedge, played the notes
and voila, no more rattle. I removed the wedge added a drop of Franklin's
hide glue and replaced it and was done for the morning.
I was scheduled to return at 3:30 to "touchup" the tuning after sound check.
I arrived on time and sat for almost 3 hours waiting, Brickman didn't arrive
until after 5 and then was unhappy with the tone of the piano through the
tenor section.
I had pre-tuned the piano Wed. afternoon using a concert tuning giving it
plenty of stretch in the upper end which gave it a brighter sound in the
treble and with the strong bass of the D made the tenor sound muffled by
comparison. He was complaining about that throughout the sound check. His
tech guy came over and told me he prefers Yamaha's and that was the real
problem. There was some mention that it was a Hamburg D by the theatre
manager, my Steinway knowledge isn't that strong, I wouldn't know how to
tell.

I didn't tell him that I had told the people at the school that the piano
was in very poor regulation, aftertouch of .060"+, hammers checking very
low, repitition springs tight, 25+ swings on the few random hammerflanges I
checked and more.
While I was prepping the piano, prep being rough tuning, hunting for the
rattle and fine tuning it on Wed., that was all they wanted/allowed me to
do, there was a meeting at which it was decided I should only tune, not do
any "tech" work. It was explained to me that the pianos had been rebuilt by
their "Steinway rebuilder" who had given them a warranty and he would be
called for the tech work.

The link below is an article about him and his rebuilding work for the
school. If you google his name, some other articles and his website come up.
He is not a PTG member, I don't believe he ever has been, note the
self-taught quote. To my knowledge he has no contact with any techs, at
least in this area, none in our chapter. With the exception of John
Sheldach, who left his employ to work as a piano tech in the LaCrosse, WI
area and was my predecessor at the school in question, before following his
fiance to her new job in Madison, WI about 150 miles away
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3652/is_200009/ai_n8910061

I would be very interested to know if anyone knows this Steinway
rebuilder or of him outside our little area.

Mike
-
I feel sorry for the person who can't get genuinely excited about his work.
Not only will he never be satisfied, but he will never achieve anything
worthwhile.
Walter Chrysler



Michael Magness
Magness Piano Service
608-786-4404
www.IFixPianos.com <http://www.ifixpianos.com/>
email mike at ifixpianos.com
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