Epoxy Man Strikes Again

Farrell mfarrel2@tampabay.rr.com
Sat, 8 Mar 2003 00:07:41 -0500


Ron. What is your screwing pattern? (Bridge-gluing-wise!) Do you run one through ever rib into the bridge and one between each set of ribs and that's it? After dry, remove screws from rib/bridge and dowel. Leave screws and buttons between ribs? And that's all there is to it? Thanks.

Terry Farrell
  
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Ron Nossaman" <RNossaman@cox.net>
To: "Pianotech" <pianotech@ptg.org>
Sent: Friday, March 07, 2003 6:49 PM
Subject: Re: Epoxy Man Strikes Again


> 
> >4. Tone killer, as reported by a friend who used epoxy glue for a bridge 
> >(as an adhesive).
> >
> >Hmmm. Anyone know anything about this? Or is this an offshoot of the 
> >"circle of sound" theory?
> 
> Not in my experience. Folks have been using epoxy for bridge work for a 
> long time - because it works quite well. If the tone was killed in the 
> piano with an epoxy attached bridge, it was for reasons other than the use 
> (at least the correct use) of epoxy. I habitually bed cutoff bars in, and 
> fill rib mortices with epoxy for new rib scales to very satisfactory affect.
> 
> 
> >I have never glued a bridge to a board. I will be doing so soon. I know 
> >that you need good even clamping pressure when using hide glue or 
> >Titebond. I have fear that I won't get good pressure everywhere. Epoxy 
> >would eliminate that concern. Anyone in the mood to convince me that I 
> >will get a good bond by running a few screws through the board back into 
> >the bridge? Or convince me epoxy is not a good choice - haven't seen good 
> >evidence yet!
> >
> >Terry Farrell
> 
> 
> I've always done it just that way. My Titebond attached bridges are clamped 
> to the board by screws and soundboard buttons alone, with possibly a small 
> hand clamp on the extreme treble end. Just enough pressure to close any gap 
> and get some glue squeeze out. I guarantee that anything past an hour later 
> (actually, more like 10 minutes), you won't get one of those bridges off 
> that board without destroying the board. Why in the world wouldn't that be 
> adequate? It just isn't any more critical than that.
> 
> If you want to use epoxy, by all means do it instead of asking to be talked 
> out of it. It shouldn't do any harm, but I don't see any reason to go to 
> the trouble, and there won't be a discernable performance benefit or 
> penalty either way.
> 
> Ron N
> 
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