Not that this should be consider as a permanent fix, but I wonder what affect CA glue would have on the jumpy pins. A good time to experiment. After thoughts, Jon Page At 06:13 PM 03/29/2000 -0500, you wrote: >My take on an accident is this. A piano was in a certain condition before an >"accident." Insurance should pay to put a piano back to the condition before >the accident. If the piano needs work that would necessitate that parts have >to be replaced, then that should be covered under the insurance. > >In this particular incident, hammers swinging freely, pin torque a little >different, are all things that were caused by the "accident." If you, as a >technician, feel that parts should be replaced, including a pin block, then >that is what you should recommend if you think you can "fix" the problems, >then report that. But under no circumstance should you accept an insurance >claim that the piano will "get by" with anything less. > >Willem Jon Page, piano technician Harwich Port, Cape Cod, Mass. mailto:jonpage@mediaone.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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