[pianotech] Damper Wire Polishing

PAULREVENKOJONES at aol.com PAULREVENKOJONES at aol.com
Wed Feb 11 15:32:42 PST 2009


:Picture attached and enclosed...
 
Paul
 

 
 
In a message dated 2/9/2009 10:29:15 P.M. Central Standard Time,  
pianotech at a440piano.net writes:

Hey Paul,
 
I do the same thing!  Well, OK, my  version is the low-rent version.  I just 
cut a small rectangle of the  felt and manually polish.  I think I like your 
idea better.  But to  be clear, you put a cutting edge on the same piece that 
you then chuck into  the drill and use to polish the pins?
 
William R. Monroe


We did an experiment several years ago, polishing damper wires with  three 
different polishes (Noxxon, Flitz, and Wenol), and under the  microscope, the 
differences were radical. Virtually no striations with the  Flitz, and more with 
the Wenol, and finally much more with the Noxxon.  Quite visible. And we also 
use old hammer felt for the same purpose.  Actually, if you get one of those 
old Schaff items, the rubber tipped  thingies for "polishing tuning pins", 
throw away the rubber thingies, put a  sharp bevel edge on the steel part that 
chucks into the drill (just chuck it  into a drill and hold a file against the 
turning edge), then use the sharp  edge to cut cylinders of hammer felt, drill 
a hole in the center, use  contact cement to hold the felt in the steel, et 
voila,  instant key pin polishing tool. Nifty. You need to get hammer  tailings 
that allow you to drill out the cylinders from the side to get the  length for 
the balance rail pins. And when changing out the felt, you need  to clean up 
the cement a bit with solvent. Works like a charm.
 
Paul
 
 
In a message dated 2/9/2009 6:59:21 P.M. Central Standard Time,  
pianotech at a440piano.net writes:

My  wrists tend to get tired pinching cloth or scotch-brite pads over the  
course of 60 odd damper wires, so I'm always looking for an easier  way.  So, 
I found another use for scrap hammer felt.  Just  drill a small hole through 
the scrap, add Flitz, and polish.  No  squeezing, just a few glide back and 
forth, then a wipe off - nice and  shiny.  Yahoo, I'm satisfied.

William R.  Monroe





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