[CAUT] M&H pressure lube

llafargue llafargue@charter.net
Wed, 9 Mar 2005 21:50:17 -0600


Thanks Danny.  I'll work with this.  



Lance Lafargue, RPT
LAFARGUE PIANOS
New Orleans Chapter, PTG
985.72P.IANO
llafargue@charter.net
www.lafarguepianos.com
 
 

-----Original Message-----
From: caut-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf Of
Danny L Tassin
Sent: Wednesday, March 09, 2005 12:09 PM
To: College and University Technicians
Subject: Re: [CAUT] M&H pressure lube


Hi, Avery, 

With the hammer pointing "out" toward the round end of the piano, I 
continuiously "hold" the hammer in my hand while at the same time I'm
either
lightly pulling on or pushing away (aka: tapping) with the palm of my
hand.
I really never let my hand leave the feel (touch) of the hammer handle
go 
away from that control.   I know this may sound silly, but it's  "all in
the 
wrist action," accually.  I allow my hand to "flop" (if you will) to the

extent of my "tapping", either away from me or toward me.   I keep full 
control of the hammer "in my hand" while making the tapping, (or,
jerking, 
some may call it), motion to acheive the result of "literally" allowing
the 
full length of the string to "move" at the exact instant I'm pounding a
test 
blow into the key/hammer (going into the string). 

I'm sure there are as many different "hammer techniques" out there as
there 
are different piano technicians.   But, when is comes to stability; when
it 
comes to "setting the string" to where you want it and it not move, this
is 
the way to do it. 

Hope this helps. 

Dan Tassin, RPT
________________________________________________________________________
__ 


Avery Todd writes: 

> Dan, 
> 
> One question. 
> 
> At 08:46 AM 3/9/2005, you wrote: 
> 
> Snip 
> 
> I'd like to work with this for a while but there's one thing I'm not
sure 
> of. What do you mean by "tapping" of the hammer? 
> 
>> I have found that a very light "tapping" of the hammer when setting
the 
>> string right at the same instant you test-blow the key, will put a 
>> tremedous "force" (so to speak) through the  whole string at that
instant 
>> the hammer hits the sting, causing it to adjust, or move - if you
will - 
>> , the whole lenght of the string.   It literally will equal the
tention 
>> thru the whole lenght of the string, setting it to a sability that
will 
>> amaze you.  I mean, once you have it "set" using this method,  it
will 
>> NOT move, I don't care how hard or how many times you pound on the
key.   
>> It literally stabalizes the whole string.
> 
> Avery Todd
> University of Houston 
> 
>>> Lance Lafargue, RPT
>>> LAFARGUE PIANOS
>>> New Orleans Chapter, PTG
>>> 985.72P.IANO
>>> llafargue@charter.net
>>> www.lafarguepianos.com 
>>> 
>> _______________________________________________
>> caut list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives
>  
> 
> _______________________________________________
> caut list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives 
> 
 


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