Litter box soundboard
Elwood Doss
edoss at utm.edu
Sun Apr 1 12:08:34 MDT 2007
Didn't they know to spread kitty litter on top the soundboard? That
would have helped with the stain problem, provided it was changed out on
a regular basis...turn the piano upside down and dump it out is the best
way, but I don't know what they would do with the strings rusting.
WD-40 maybe?
Joy!
Elwood
Elwood Doss, Jr., M.M.E., RPT
Piano Technician/Technical Director
Department of Music
145 Fine Arts Building
The University of Tennessee at Martin
Martin, TN 38238
731/881-1852
FAX: 731/881-7415
HOME: 731/587-5700
________________________________
From: Joel A. Jones [mailto:jajones2 at wisc.edu]
Sent: Saturday, March 31, 2007 9:11 AM
To: Pianotech List
Subject: Re: Litter box soundboard
Jim,
Dale is on the mark - #1. shoot the cat ! ! !
Then replace the bass strings and any treble
strings that have been contaminated. The reason
is the urine eats through the steel strings quickly.
Ideal solution is to replace EVERYTHING.
I am just finishing a Steinway that had the bass
string core wire completely eaten away . The winding
held the string in. This happened within 2 weeks while
the owner was away and the cat sitter didn't notice
what was happening.
After removing the strings find a vet that specializes
in cats for a product that masks the smell of the urine.
My spray is at the shop but I think it is called 'Icky Poo'.
Follow directions, and use it everywhere. In the action
under the plate, test the finish for safe use, and keep
the areas wet as the label directions describes the
process.
I am going to guess that the owner is an older, single lady.
Recently I was involved with a situation where a
lady had 70 cats in her house. There is a disease
with a long name, that occurs with older, single women
who take in cats. Both her houses were condemned and
razed. She had moved to another town trying to escape
the health department.
We tried an experiment to save her console
piano with the icky spray treatment. The action damage was
repairable, as the cats did not get inside the piano.
The case was amazingly unharmed with no loose
veneer. Keys were naturally 'sticking'. After a very
extensive cleaning we thought it was OK. She
consigned the piano to a dealer, who eventually
put it in the landfill. The piano did not smell , but
he found that several employees were allergic to cats
and their reaction was immediate when they came
near the piano.
A long saga, and perhaps a bit off topic, however
the short answer stands - shoot the cat otherwise
the same litter box situation will reoccur.
Joel
Joel Jones, RPT
Madison, WI
On Mar 30, 2007, at 11:39 PM, Jim Johnson wrote:
I have a customer with a Kawai grand which has apparently been used as
a
litter box. I'm looking for suggestions for removing stains from the
soundboard without further damaging the strings with cleaning liquids.
I
have cleaned it using dry methods but it still looks gross. Attached is
a
photo of the problem. Any help will be greatly appreciated. You can see
the mess is you go to the following link.
http://www.pbase.com/jhjpiano/image/76413280
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.ptg.org/pipermail/pianotech/attachments/20070401/87ce0d2b/attachment.html
More information about the Pianotech
mailing list