Dopey to dope?

Andrew & Rebeca Anderson anrebe@zianet.com
Fri, 31 Oct 2003 09:21:58 -0700


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Julie:
I've encountered an attitude in a client who believed their piano should 
stay tuned indefinitely after having once been tuned.  Make sure you are 
not dealing with that.  Sometimes a little education goes a long way.
Driving the pins in a little further with a hammer and set will generally 
make the difference (don't forget to pull the action and support the 
pinblock if you are doing this even a short distance away from either 
end).  Doping will help a little in the case of humidity cycling damage, 
depending how bad (also pull the action for this as doping it will have 
results you will never want to duplicate).  This can be difficult to get 
into the wood if there are bushings around the pins (haven't had to do this 
on a Kawaii and don't recall if they use them).

Something for comment from the rest of the list, should re-pinning be 
combined with re-stringing?  Unless, of course, they look really good and 
aren't sticking at the capo bar(s).

Andrew
At 10:29 PM 10/30/2003 -0500, you wrote:
>Greetings,
>
>             I have a lady I am going to see Monday who has a Kawaii grand 
> that she claims will not hold a tuning. I never doped a pinblock before. 
> If upon inspection the pins are loose, should I dope. Is this an unwise move?
>
>              I hear  that doping only lasts for one tuning and then the 
> obvious is inevitable, which I hear is a re-pin job. How loose must pins 
> be to sanction a re-pinning?
>
>Thanx,
>Julie
>

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