Starkers

tune4u@earthlink.net tune4u@earthlink.net
Mon, 17 Mar 2003 15:54:02 -0600


You may be in a unique position to answer the age-old philosophical
question: "What is the sound of solidified sewage?"

This may sound harsh, but the P.A. Stark spinet (60's era) I've worked on
were just awful in terms of "scale" and timbre. No offense to Wim's dad.

Alan Barnard
Salem, MO

-----Original Message-----
From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org]On
Behalf Of Ron Nossaman
Sent: Monday, March 17, 2003 3:57 PM
To: Pianotech
Subject: Starkers



I tuned a dandy this morning - a P. A. Stark Supersonic Conso-Grand. My
first, nearly as I can recall. It's almost exactly 1 meter tall, and has an
A-0 speaking length of somewhere around 1600mm! The bass bridge is placed
diagonally in the extreme lower right corner, as far as it could possibly
be gotten from the upper left. bass string angle is so extreme that the
hammers are scarfed off at the corners like a square "grand" so they will
be narrow enough at the strike point to not hit neighboring unisons.
Monochord dampers are as narrow as can be, but still hang up on one
another. It has a 32 note bass, with 15 monochords, 12 copper wrapped
bichords, 3 aluminum wrapped bichords, and 2 plain bichords. Two more plain
bichords in the tenor, and the rest the usual plain trichords to fill out.
The scale, says the plate, is by "Wolfe of Wichita". Anyone know anything
about this piano, and more specifically, Wolfe of Wichita?
Ron N

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