Tuning a Duo/Art player piano
Brian Doepke
doepkeb at comcast.net
Fri Jul 7 06:19:49 MDT 2006
Hi Sam,
You are correct!!
I am so thankful that there are folks on this website willing to share their
knowledge.
Brian P. Doepke
AAA Piano Works, Inc.
Piano Tuning-Repair-Purchase Consults
260-432-2043
260-417-1298
-----Original Message-----
From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of Samuel Choy
Sent: Thursday, July 06, 2006 9:39 PM
To: Pianotech List
Subject: Re: Tuning a Duo/Art player piano
Hi all,
Well, I tuned the player piano today...sort of. It wasn't that difficult to
get the necessary parts out of the way. At first I thought that I could tune
around the the mute/rinky tink bar, but that proved very difficult. So I
eventually removed it.
I set the temperment quickly enough. They told me that it hadn't been tuned
in five years, so I decided against raising it to pitch (I told them that I
wasn't and they were fine with that.) But tuning the thing was a major pain.
First of all, there were false beats galore..It almost seemed like there
were false beats within false beats. Also the pins skipped. No matter who
carefully I tried to move my tuning hammer, it skipped higher or lower than
I wanted each time.
Between the pain it was to tune and the time it took me to remove the
requesite parts to access the tuning pins, it took me almost four hours to
tune the darn thing. And then it still sounded like cr..p. But I got it
done.
It was suggested that I charge above my extra fee for the job.
Unfortunately, that was after I gave them my quote--my regular price less
10% for being a first time customer. I won't make that mistake next time.
I've got to say, though, that it was a real learning experience. I don't
think that it would take me as long the next time.
Thanks again for everyone's excellent advice...I used it and it did help me
a lot.
Regards,
Sam Choy
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