old Lowrey console

Robert Goodale rrg@unlv.edu
Fri, 14 Mar 2003 14:45:48 -0800


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These were pretty awful pianos from the get-go so let's start with that. =
 As far as something that might actually make a difference have you =
tried water and alcohol?  In extreme cases where the hammers are so hard =
they resemble tungsten-vanadium spikes you may have to resort to wetting =
them down with 50/50 water and alcohol.  Such a treatment is equal to =
about 150 needle pricks and a whole lot faster.  Use a hypo-oiler and =
briefly soak the shoulders.  If need be you can go back and hit the =
strike point as well.  The effects are immediate and won't change after =
it dries; what you hear is what you get.  Be careful not to over do it.

Rob Goodale, RPT
Las Vegas, NV


  List,
  I just got back from tuning a friends piano which is an old Lowrey =
Console (Charles Fredrick Stein).  This was my third time tuning it in =
the past 12 months.  It holds the tuning quite well, but the tone is a =
very ugly, schreeking, bright nasty sound that I can hardly stand while =
I tune it.  She gives piano lessons every week on it and I can't =
understand how it doesn't drive her nuts.  I have tried before to shape, =
needle, and soften the hammers to even out the tone a bit, but nothing I =
do seems to bring down the schreekiness.  And to add on top of this, it =
sits on a hardwood floor which makes it echo throughout the house.
  Is there an easy/short fix to this problem shy of replacing the =
hammers that anyone here has found?

  Dave Foster


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