---------------------- multipart/alternative attachment I would have them send the piano back, with the recomendation to not bother importing such er... garbage. You gotta figure that a brand new "piano" that exhibits this kind of thing is gonna exhibit other such nonsense in a relatively short period of time. These things arent even good enough to be calles PSO's. More like P'sOS. grin. If the technical community doesnt start putting some demands for a certain level of basis quality on the industry..... then nobody will. :) Without wanting to sound over-critical.... hehe Richard Brekne I.C.P.T.G. N.P.T.F. Bergen, Norway Jarred Finnigan wrote: > Hi list!I have recently subscribed to this list and before posing my > little dilemma I would just like to express how grateful I am for the > great wealth of experience that exists out there, thanks! I do a fair > bit of tuning for one of Australia's largest piano houses and today > came across a slightly unusual problem (unusual to me anyway). I was > pitch raising a brand new "Gors & Khalman" upright out of the "Pearl > River" factory in China (yuk, awful). As you will know if you have > ever had the "privilege" of tuning one of these instruments they > typically have extremely tight tuning pins. This one had very loose > pins two of which would not even hold pitch. Of course I have been > asked to write the mandatory report. Apart from the obvious re-pin, > what would you do?Any replies greatly appreciated. Jarred > FinniganAPTTA PTTG (VIC) > jfinnigan@optusnet.com.au ---------------------- multipart/alternative attachment An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/a2/b1/dd/55/attachment.htm ---------------------- multipart/alternative attachment--
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