Thanks for this clear explanation Ed, I certainly appreciate it. Matter of fact, Scott is sizing some key-pin holes as we speak. Here's two other great tips I picked up off our list a couple of years ago. We're also using these today, and they really work: (sorry I don't recall both contributors offhand) Cleaning Gunky Rep. Springs and slots: 1.) Make a j-shaped hook from a wire mute-handle, profile and dull the end to clean spring-slots. (Fred S.) 2.) Use a 1/4" wooden dowel atop the repetion levers to support the springs, and polish them with a felt wheel on a dremel tool. When you run into gunky slots and springs, nothing I know of works better, especially the fact the wippens remain on the stack. Thanks guys! Now one of my own: We've been happily burnishing rep. surfaces with the radiused edge of a brass ivory-clamp, ever since Fred shared this tip several years ago. While in Banff last month, I noticed a brass hammer-iron (a tool I own but never use) on the bench, about the same time I'm demonstrating burnishing to a work-study. Voila! This tool fits a combination handle, making it most comfortable to hold, and it has a beautifully radiused end. I humbly submit, it may be the perfect tool for burnishing repetitions. Check it out! BTW, notice when burnishing, (similar to sanding a flat surface), the more you work the surface, the sharper the edges (aris) become. I think it's good practice to gently round over these edges (both inside and out) after burnishing the top surface. best regards, and thanks! Mark Cramer Brandon University -----Original Message----- From: caut-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces@ptg.org]On Behalf Of Ed Sutton Sent: Tuesday, June 28, 2005 12:31 PM To: College and University Technicians Subject: RE: [CAUT] glue sizing (great tip!!) Mark- Alcohol and yellow glue mix to a transparent gum. Adding alcohol to a water/glue mixture might help, but probably best results will come from pure alcohol first. When grinding fine pigments for watercolors, alcohol is used to "lead" the water. The alcohol has low surface tension, and wets things that won't take water. Then, since water and alcohol mix easily, the alcohol "draws" the water into the pile of fine powder. It can help us that way, too. I use rubbing alcohol in my glue softening solutions (about one part each of rubbing alcohol, vinegar and water). It soaks directly into old felts and cloths that tend to repel water. If the felt is very hard to wet, I use straight rubbing alcohol on the first pass. (Before using any softening solutions, I first try straight steam.) When rebushing hammer flanges, I squirt pure 200 proof alcohol into the bushing while the glue is wet and the pin is inserted, but before trimming and fitting the final pin. It seems to insure a good final fit...or maybe it's my superstition. Ed Sutton > [Original Message] > From: Mark Cramer <Cramer@BrandonU.ca> > To: College and University Technicians <caut@ptg.org> > Date: 6/28/2005 12:08:44 PM > Subject: RE: [CAUT] glue sizing (great tip!!) > > Thanks for this great tip David (swabbing the hole w/alcohol to break > surface tension) I will add it to my recipe! > > Mark Cramer > Brandon University > > BTW, for the same reason I swithced to re-sizing flange birds-eyes with an > alcohol/glue solution rather than water/glue, several years ago: > > (squirt in with a syringe, blow out with compressed air, dry over > Dampp-Chaser bar... works fine!) > > I wonder why I wouldn't replace the water in key-hole sizing solution with > alcohol as well? The wood is already swollen from steam, so it's not as > though I need the water to swell the wood. Anyone comment? > > THANKS! > > > > > My one addition is to swap the hole with > >some alcohol, before applying warm to hot sizing solution. If the keys > >are dirty, the solution just seems to sit without absorbing into the > >fibers unless I've used something to break the water's surface tension, > >. Otherwise, my current preference for older keys is probably more along > >Don's "pin-less" approach. For new keys, I'd probably try the pin-caul > >method, if I had the correct size pin. > > > >David Skolnik > > _______________________________________________ > caut list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives _______________________________________________ caut list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives
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