Help with Steinway Model..

Robin Hufford hufford1@airmail.net
Tue, 18 Nov 2003 01:23:13 -0800


Michael,
     There is, in fact, a date cast into the plate at the tail that
represents the date of the casting as Calin says.  Also, sometimes,
various scale designations can be found below the dating.  I think, in
1910, the company must have become concerned with people being able to
read these so they substituted a letter where the year would have
been.   One must count alphabetically the number the letter represents,
beginning with the letter A and add to this ten.  This then represents
the year of the dating.  At the other end, and elsewhere are a number of
patent dates.
     Also, I would suggest as regards the A model that there really
should be four varieties considered, although this is not how they are
normally viewed:  They are:  The first one - the A1 roundtail with 85
notes.    The next should be the 88 note roundtail.  These are not
exactly the same as one has an additional rib and is, to my ear, a
distinctly different sounding piano.  Then there are the other two
variants.
     In my opinion  the longscale A- the 6ft four inch one, should not
even be considered an A but, actually, another model.  It shows the
continuity in the company's view of the power of marketing, which
persists to this day,  that they would introduce another model,
substantially different than the first three mentioned above, and yet
refer to it by a designation which actually had applied to a
substantially different piano.  Some things never change.
Regards, Robin Hufford

Michael Gamble wrote:

>    Part 1.1    Type: Plain Text (text/plain)
>            Encoding: quoted-printable


This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC