Singing Samick

Farrell mfarrel2@tampabay.rr.com
Sun, 25 Aug 2002 15:09:21 -0400


Just thought it might be useful to someone who might not be aware to point out that the method described below by David A. is VERY different from that taught by Roger J. I use Roger J's method and find it very simple, very controllable, and very effective.

Terry Farrell
  
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "David Andersen" <bigda@gte.net>
To: <pianotech@ptg.org>
Sent: Sunday, August 25, 2002 12:52 PM
Subject: Re: Singing Samick


> >Roger,
> >You had an article on steaming in a recent Journal, right?  I'm 
> >considering trying it on a 1  year old Yamaha G2 that has already begun 
> >breaking strings in the treble....hotel lounge with big bands and probably 
> >no monitor for the piano...
> >David I.
> 
> 
> Oh yes.  Steaming is good.  Get an electric teakettle with a spout that 
> will fit the strike point and high-to-mid shoulders of the biggest 
> hammers----preferably one without a whistle in it.
> 
> RESPECT STEAM.  Steam can hurt you. Badly.
> 
> That said, plug it in and wait 'til steam is a-rollin' on out; set the 
> action in your lap; carefully pick up the kettle, and put its bottom 
> front edge on the shank screws of the hammers you want to soften.
> With your other hand, reach down and bring the hammer to the spout.  
> Immerse  the strike point and high-to-mid shoulders in the hottest part 
> of the steam---right where it comes out of the spout---for, let's say, 
> initially a count of 2.  Swing it up---1, 2---swing it back.  Unplug the 
> kettle, put it down, put the action in the piano, and check out the 
> difference.  Sometimes you need more; very rarely do you need less; if 
> more IS needed, repeat in 2-second increments.  The most I've ever used 
> on a hammer---a set of Renner Blues that some knucklehead had soaked in 
> lacquer---is eight seconds.  That was nervous time deluxe; holding a 
> hammer in a jet of steam for eight seconds feels like an eternity.  Most  
> Asian rocks masquerading as hammers need 2-4 seconds. 
> 
> Steam is beautiful. Steam saves time and broken needles.  Steam is 
> semipermanent, lasting as long as a deep needling on hammers with meduim 
> to heavy use.
> 
> Hope this helps........David Andersen
> 



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