Piano Firing Missiles at Church Congregation

Horace Greeley hgreeley@stanford.edu
Sat, 27 Jan 2001 14:47:35 -0800


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Rob,

At 01:34 PM 1/27/01 -0800, you wrote:
>Bill,
>
>I must say that this is one of the most amusing piano stories I have heard 
>in a long time.  I don't know if I could contribute to a solution more 
>than what has already been suggested but you at least made my 
>day.   Shooting bass string missiles at the congregation in church.... now 
>THAT'S funny!!  Is their any particular hymn that they play that most 
>likely tends to cause this?

Probably something in C, F, G, or Bb...

Bill, FWIW, I think these are all good suggestions, but my personal 
favorite is from Dave Porritt.  My experience with these things is that my 
own needs have been best served by helping the client find another 
technician...sooner or later, this is a no-win for the technician, and it 
is good to know when to fold.

Best regards.

Horace






>Rob Goodale, RPT
>Las Vegas, NV
>
>
>Billbrpt@AOL.COM wrote:
>>List,
>>
>>Yes, it's true and I need some opinions on what to do about it.  It is a
>>Young Chang Grand model G-185, only a few years old.  It is meticulously
>>cared for but early in it's service, the pianist at this, shall we say,
>>"spirit filled" church complained of bass strings breaking and shooting out
>>of the piano.
>>
>>I have tried all of the usual.  I filed the hammers.  A monitor feeds back
>>sound to the pianist.  When I explained to the church directors that it is
>>the "vigorous" style of playing that sometimes causes strings to break, the
>>pianist resigned.  Things were OK for a while but now there is a young lady
>>who is firing scuds at the congregation faster than I can get there to
>>collect them, get them duplicated and replace them.
>>
>>She is quite upset and beside herself.  She refuses to believe that it is 
>>the
>>*way* the piano is played that is causing this.  She claims that she has
>>played the piano "all her life" and has never seen or even heard of this
>>happening.  The piano has a string cover which she yanks out and throws in
>>the corner.  She also says she has never played a piano with a "blanket" in
>>it and just "couldn't" play with it in there.  I have firmly insisted 
>>that at
>>this point, it is a matter of public safety and won't have any effect on the
>>sound.
>>
>>I am thinking that these wound strings must have particularly high tension.
>>Does anyone know if this is so?  Over the years I have heard of other such
>>instances that were cured by replacing the wound strings with a set of
>>lighter gauged, "happy" strings.  It would seem to me that a lower tension
>>would solve the problem but in reading the recent post about "replacement
>>strings", I am confused.  Some of these strings have been breaking at the
>>bass bridge termination point rather than the agraffe.  That seems very
>>unusual to me.
>>
>>Should the manufacturer supply a new set of wound strings and if so, should
>>they be a set designed for lower tension?  I presume that heavier gauged,
>>higher tension strings provide a bigger, bolder sound.  What effect would
>>lower tension have?  Just as a theoretical question, would tuning the
>>instrument to a lower pitch, say 100 cents lower prevent this from happening
>>(with the same gauge but a *new* set of strings)?  (I do not view this as an
>>option, just a possibility that might work in some other circumstance).  (I
>>also would not even consider altering the regulation to deliberately produce
>>less power).
>>
>>It is also interesting to note that to date, only wound strings have broken,
>>no plain wire.
>>
>>Bill Bremmer RPT
>>Madison, Wisconsin

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Horace Greeley,                         email:  hgreeley@stanford.edu
CNA, MCP, RPT
Systems Analyst/Engineer                voice:  650.725.9062
Controller's Office                     fax:    650.725.8014
Stanford University
651 Serra St., RM 100, MC 6215
Stanford, CA 94305-6215

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