[pianotech] Damper spring cord

wimblees at aol.com wimblees at aol.com
Thu Feb 11 12:14:03 MST 2010


Noah

Unless this is a very unusual damper flange, the best way to fix it is to replace the whole flange with a new one. You should keep an assortment of different kinds of flanges on hand at all times.  



Willem (Wim) Blees, RPT 
Piano Tuner/Technician
94-505 Kealakaa Str. 
Mililani, Oahu, HI  96789
808-349-2943 
www.Bleespiano.com
Author of: 
The Business of Piano Tuning 
available from Potter Press 
www.pianotuning.com



-----Original Message-----
From: Noah Frere <noahfrere at gmail.com>
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Sent: Thu, Feb 11, 2010 6:15 am
Subject: [pianotech] Damper spring cord


I am trying to re-spring a damper flange. I pulled back the sheath of the cord, cut, pulled the sheath back forward, applied some wood glue and worked the end into as fine a needle as i could, but alas, i could not get it all the way through the hole in the flange. About halfway through, the cord starts bunching at the entrance hole and loses rigidity. Then i applied some thin CA and Accelerator, which made it too thick, so I sliced it thinner using a razor, reapplied the CA and Accelerator, and was able to get the cord trough all the way since it was thin, but then it wouild go no further, since the angle was too great at the entrance to the flange. When i tried to pull it through with tweezers it just shredded. 
So, I tried again, the standard way, to no avail. It just is not needly enough and/or hard enough. Anyone?

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://ptg.org/pipermail/pianotech.php/attachments/20100211/1c64b9bf/attachment.htm>


More information about the pianotech mailing list

This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC