[CAUT] Polishing Agraffes

PAULREVENKOJONES at aol.com PAULREVENKOJONES at aol.com
Thu Sep 24 20:54:12 MDT 2009



In a message dated 9/24/2009 9:22:35 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
davidlovepianos at comcast.net writes:

Buffing  out to a high sheen definitely looks nice but unless you clear 
coat them the  brass begins to oxidize and your sheen is lost within a year or 
so.   
We use Brasslac, from Mohawk to coat the  agraffes. It is designed for 
brass. 

While the shape may not be perfect out of the box I think the question  is 
to what effect. 
Absolutely.

A quick reaming by hand seems to be all that is  necessary for clean and 
stable termination.  Since that’s my ultimate  goal anything beyond that seems 
like overkill.
Try it, then conclude what you may.

Once the string slides through there a few  times under tension it’s 
questionable just how perfect that shape remains  anyway, at least at the point of 
contact. 
It begins to degrade immediately. Except for the fact that  the "point" of 
contact is now a radial surface rather than two  separated points of contact 
leading to transient noise, out of the box.  Why not start from as 
perfected a condition as we can. That's how we  tune.

Then again, I do go the extra mile in a  lot of areas so I can’t really 
criticize.  It’s more drawing a  distinction between what’s nice and what’s  
necessary.
I agree.
 
P


 
David Love 
www.davidlovepianos.com
 
 
From:  caut-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Stan 
 Kroeker
Sent: Thursday, September 24, 2009 7:13 PM
To:  College and University Technicians
Subject: Re: [CAUT] Polishing  Agraffes

 
David,
 

 
You're right ... the new brass agraffes, clear-coated, look  quite nice.  
Huge improvement over the old tarnished ones.  However,  in my rebuilding, 
the paradigm is for all metal hardware, brass or nickel, to  be polished to 
the highest sheen possible.  Easily and quickly  accomplished with a hard felt 
buffing wheel charged with jeweller's rouge.  Finished this way, the 
agraffes shine out of the piano like gold  nuggets.  I love the look!
 

 
For those unconvinced that new agraffes require reaming,  try a little 
experiment and cut one in half, through one of the string holes.  You will 
notice that the cross-section is not the desired 'hour-glass'  but rather holes 
which have counter-sink profiles milled at each end.  Not the same thing!  If 
you're really obsessive and decide to  polish the recesses as well (after 
reaming) I had some success with cutting  Q-tips in half, chucking one in a 
cordless drill, charging it with rouge and  running into the holes (I have a 
fixture which holds about a dozen aggraffes  at a time in a vice).  I was 
surprised at how these disposable things  held out.  Only needed about half a 
dozen (so ... cut in half ... 12 ...  duh).
 

 
Is all this necessary?  Maybe ... maybe not ... but  for a couple hours of 
work, you've eliminated a potential source of unpleasant  noise and anyone 
glancing under the lid will surely notice the gleaming  hardware.
 

 
Thanks for sharing your techniques, David.  I've  enjoyed reading them!
 

 
Regards,
 

 
Stan Kroeker, RPT
 
 
On 24-Sep-09, at 7:57 PM, David Love  wrote:



 
 
One  light turn with one of those little reamers and I’ve never had a noise 
problem  with new agraffes and without going through the whole polishing 
routine.   In this case I’d probably opt for new just because it’s easier and 
new  agraffes aren’t that expensive when you consider the labor of the 
polishing  process to remove string grooves and discoloration and such.  Give 
them a  quick shot of some lacquer for brass and they’ll stay looking nice for 
much  longer.   Whenever I change bass strings I just make it a habit of  
changing the agraffes. 
 

 
 
David  Love
 
_www.davidlovepianos.com_ (http://www.davidlovepianos.com/) 

 

 
 
 
From: _caut-bounces at ptg.org_ (mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org)  
[_mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org_ (mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org) ] On Behalf Of 
_PAULREVENKOJONES at aol.com_ (mailto:PAULREVENKOJONES at aol.com) 
Sent: Thursday, September 24, 2009 12:20  PM
To: _caut at ptg.org_ (mailto:caut at ptg.org) 
Subject: Re: [CAUT] Polishing  Agraffes


 

 
 


 
 


 
 
In a  message dated 9/24/2009 12:45:59 P.M. Central Daylight Time, 
_pmctooner at cfl.rr.com_ (mailto:pmctooner at cfl.rr.com)  writes:


 
Since  the agraffes are out, don't fool with them. Put in new ones. You'll 
get a  better termination.

 
 
Can  you provide some proof of that statement? I'd love to see it. :-)

 
 


 
 
Paul









----  Lawrence R K Becker <_lawrence.becker at insightbb.com_ 
(mailto:lawrence.becker at insightbb.com) >  wrote: 
> The agraffes  are out of the piano.  I have been putting the polish on,
>  letting dry, then buffing with a polishing wheel on a Dremel tool, and  
using
> a pipe cleaner in a second Dremel tool for the holes and their  
concavities.
>  
> Lawrence
> 
>    _____  
> 
> From: _caut-bounces at ptg.org_ (mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org)  
[_mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org_ (mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org) ] On  Behalf Of Mccoy,
> Alan
> Sent: Wednesday, September 23, 2009  7:05 PM
> To: CAUTlist
> Subject: Re: [CAUT] Polishing  Agraffes
> 
> 
> Are you polishing the  agraffes in the piano fully strung or removing 
them?
> Also are you  polishing just the outside surfaces?
> 
> Alan
> 
> 
> 
>    _____  
> 
> From: Lawrence R K Becker  <_lawrence.becker at insightbb.com_ 
(mailto:lawrence.becker at insightbb.com) >
>  Reply-To: CAUTlist <_caut at ptg.org_ (mailto:caut at ptg.org) >
> Date: Wed, 23 Sep  2009 15:08:23 -0700
> To: CAUTlist <_caut at ptg.org_ (mailto:caut at ptg.org) >
> Subject: [CAUT]  Polishing Agraffes
> 
> Dear Group-
> 
> What polishing compound do  you find works well when cleaning up 
agraffes?  I
> have some  from a new Boston that were discolored after an HVAC pipe 
leaked
>  into the piano, down the (mostly) bass strings, and into the agraffes.   
I
> used Hagerty Heavy-Duty copper brass & metal polish, which  initial tests
> showed to work a little better than Brasso.  The  results are not
> acceptable--the discoloration is still there, and  the brass did not get 
that
> high shine I've seen when polishing  capstans.
> 
>  I'll have to re-do these, and would like to do so only once.
> 
> Any help  appreciated.
> 
>  Lawrence Becker, RPT
> Northern Kentucky University
> 
>



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