In a message dated 10/13/2010 12:37:55 P.M. Central Daylight Time, JD at Pianomaker.co.uk writes: At 22:27 -0400 12/10/2010, PAULREVENKOJONES at aol.com wrote: >Hamburg used this bed/frame curving up to a point, and no longer do. >New York gave up doing this years ago. > >See the attached communication from Horace Greeley from 1997. At 08:00 -0500 13/10/2010, William Monroe wrote: >I would respectfully disagree. ÊWhen at the factory three years ago >(and this spring) we looked at the CNC machine that does the cutting >to radius the key bed. ÊIt was still done then, and I've heard >nothing to the contrary in the past three years. ÊFYI. Ah well, there's another maybe! Since the evidence in the world at large for the truth of anything is still not all in, I watch in wonder those who live in worlds of certainty. Thank you for the stuff from Horace, Paul. Lots of interesting stuff there even if it does not tell the whole story and even if it does a partial whitewash job on the monopoly from Stuttgart. As to Kluge, I think the takeover by Steinway took place only 6 or 7 years ago, so if Steinway have any complaints about them now, they know where to look. Incidentally there are various types of "European" oak. The English oak is supposed to be best for ships Actually, I know a British boat-builder who said exactly the same thing, and I always thought it was simple chauvinism. More evidence. :-) , but the French brown oak I have seen is far nicer for pianos. JD -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://ptg.org/pipermail/pianotech.php/attachments/20101013/5e6de158/attachment.htm>
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