[pianotech] Old can of worms (was Re: tunelab vs verituner)

David Love davidlovepianos at comcast.net
Mon May 7 13:13:27 MDT 2012


We can handle damn.  

But I agree, some well focused practice would probably do the trick.  If you can tune a clean unison aurally, then you can tune the whole piano with a little direction and practice.  In fact, if you own an ETD it offers a perfect way to practice until you get it right if you want to spend the time.  What are the requirements now for those who want to take the RPT exam and use an ETD?  I proctored an exam awhile ago in which the tech (who passed btw) tuned pretty much everything but unisons with the ETD.  I don't now recall what the aural requirements were for him but certainly it was less than when I took the exam.  

RPT standards have to be set somewhere otherwise the classification doesn't mean anything (and in reality, in terms of the quality of service delivered, it doesn't necessarily mean much).  It seems like passing any of the sections is not really that difficult with some proper preparation and practice.  You just have to take the time--like anything else.  The preparation alone will tell you much about where you are deficient in several areas and gives you an opportunity to bring those up to snuff.  

Keep in mind that the examiners aren't out to trick you or try and flunk you, they want people to pass.  It isn't like the bar exam in which only a certain number of lawyers are allowed into the club in any one year.  

David Love
www.davidlovepianos.com


-----Original Message-----
From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Gary
Sent: Monday, May 07, 2012 11:04 AM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [pianotech] Old can of worms (was Re: tunelab vs verituner)

Duaine, I'm certainly no prude..but I find no use for using swear words 
on this list.  My vocabulary is likely more salty than anyone's in 
person, but in an email to my peers, there's no reason.
If you put as much energy into learning aural tuning as you doing 
complaining about the test, you could probably pass it.
gary



On 5/7/2012 11:54 AM, Duaine Hechler wrote:
> Sorry, but I will never get past this, as long as the organization 
> still has the - damn - aural tuning test !
>
> Just sayin'
>
> On 05/07/2012 09:31 AM, David Love wrote:
>> I thought we've gotten past this.  I know many professionals who tune 
>> with ETDs and don't necessarily do aural checks other than unisons.  
>> And I know a few aural tuners who don't necessarily deliver very good 
>> tunings in spite of all their aural checks.
>>
>> David Love
>> www.davidlovepianos.com
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On 
>> Behalf Of Duaine Hechler
>> Sent: Monday, May 07, 2012 12:21 AM
>> To: pianotech at ptg.org
>> Subject: [pianotech] Old can of worms (was Re: tunelab vs verituner)
>>
>> On 05/07/2012 12:45 AM, tnrwim at aol.com wrote:
>>> Duane.
>>>
>>> A "real" professional piano tuner uses  a ETD, and then checks it 
>>> aurally. Those that only uses a ETD are just taking money from 
>>> customers to tune the piano. That doesn't necessarily make them a 
>>> professional.
>>>
>>> Wim
>>
>>
>
>



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