A 90 year old Chickering is built like a battleship, and should have very solid support behind the block. I don't think I'd be too worried about using oversized pins on this one. But I would like to get an old set of #1 pins, drop them in the holes of a de-strung piano, then thoroughly CA the block, back the pins out and try restringing with the original size. The CA would secure any loosening laminations, as well as solidifying the wood, I feel. And if the holes were too tight, smaller pins or reaming could be tried. And you can always turn the pins in, instead of driving, to stress the block less. Thump --- Alan Forsyth <alanforsyth@fortune4.fsnet.co.uk> wrote: > "........Customer has 90-year-old Chickering > upright, really worn out. BUT > customer has sentimental attachment to it. > ..........." > > Yes, there has been many a time I have informed a > customer that their piano > is only worth spending money on for sentimental > reasons or semi-mental > reasons. > Apart from this, many technicians here are very > dubious about using oversize > pins on a "pre-war" piano for fear of cracking the > pinblock. It is > apparently quite a common occurrence. > > Regards > Alan Forsyth > Edinburgh > > _______________________________________________ > pianotech list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Tax Center - File online, calculators, forms, and more http://tax.yahoo.com
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