[CAUT] Kawai prehung hammers - Very good!

David Ilvedson ilvey at sbcglobal.net
Thu Aug 2 17:55:28 MDT 2007


You didn't toss because of traveling issues?   



David Ilvedson, RPT

Pacifica, CA 94044









Original message

From: "Jim Busby" 

To: "College and University Technicians" 

Received: 8/2/2007 3:39:24 PM

Subject: Re: [CAUT] Kawai prehung hammers - Very good!





Hi Avery,

I’ve been disappointed in the past with Yamaha and Steinway prehungs. I ended up tossing one set of Yamahas
 I think the synthetic parts are the “secret” to the Kawai parts needing no traveling, etc. Boy, am I a believer now!

Cheers,

Jim







From: caut-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Avery Todd

Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 1:24 PM

To: College and University Technicians

Subject: Re: [CAUT] Kawai prehung hammers - Very good!

Hi Jim, 

I didn't realize that Kawai did prehung hammers. I've bought them from Yamaha, Wally Brooks & Pianotek! When I was still working at the university, it saved a LOT of time! Nice to hear that Kawai does that also. 

Avery 



 

On 8/2/07, Jim Busby <jim_busby at byu.edu> wrote: 

List,

Just a report on Kawai prehung hammers/shanks and flanges. We bought 7 sets for KG2As, KG2Ds, and a KG2E. I usually don't like prehung hammers but these were wonderful! All details were immaculate, and in each set there were only one or two that even needed traveling or burning! Not only that, but right out of the box they sounded great on the piano. I give Kawai an "A plus" for these, and the cost was less than I usually pay for hammers alone. Kudos to Don and Kawai. 

Vince tells me he had the same experience; Very good.

On a side note, with the (6) students working many hours we developed a system to complete the following in TWO SHOP DAYS;

New shanks flanges and hammers 

Complete restringing 

Recondition agraffes 

Dressing of v-bar and other friction points 

Repinned hammer rail and balanciers 

New "Crescendo" front and balance rail punchings 

Rebushing of lyre, underlevers, etc. 

Other "misc." stuff and complete regulation, tunings voicing, etc. 

In essence, it's like a new piano. The students enjoyed this process and although the first one took more time (6 days), after they got the hang of it it seemed like our system came together the faster we went. In all we did 14 pianos this summer. Buying the Kawai hammers saved us about one full day and big bucks. (Maybe I'm too slow with all the hammer work
) 

Anyway, while it seemed a bit like NASCAR this summer it was fun and the experience for the students was tremendous. 

Jim Busby BYU
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