[pianotech] 1880s Steinway Grand - viable project or no?

Ron Nossaman rnossaman at cox.net
Sun Mar 14 12:41:02 MDT 2010


Terry Farrell wrote:
> John - Regarding the soundboard & oil-canning, etc. - it's not a pitfall 
> if you simply plan on replacing the soundboard! Many (most - hopefully!) 
> of us would not even consider rebuilding a piano like that without 
> planning on soundboard replacement - and redesign, preferably.

Unfortunately, from what I've seen, most aren't replacing 
soundboards. First, the absence or low number of cracks is 
considered. If crown is checked at all, it's on the long rib 
where it doesn't indicate anything useful. Soundboard 
replacement is almost always approached from a profit 
standpoint. it costs too much to do, and will raise the price 
above what the market will bear, or reduce raw profit, or 
both. It's the second most important part of the instrument 
(rim first), but is most often considered to be a luxury 
option at the tail end of the list. The economic reality, 
unfortunately, takes precedent over the structural and tonal. 
We all have that to deal with.


Oh, and if the strings are holding the soundboard up, there 
will be negative bearing.

The Wixey inclinometer costs about $40, measures to 0.1°, and 
has a magnetic base you can attach a home made foot to for 
accurately measuring downbearing angles. One of the better 
deals in the profession.
Ron N
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