String replacement under overstrung area

Farrell mfarrel2 at tampabay.rr.com
Mon Jul 10 14:59:40 MDT 2006


I don't find there to be any reason to remove the action for a tenor string replacement. Sure, it would be easier, but I don't think the small advantage is worth it.

YMMV

Terry Farrell
  ----- Original Message ----- 


  Always good to make Dad feel useful...;-]   There is a stringing tool, which is basically a tube you slide the crimped string into.  I've heard a curtain rod also works.   Of course your removing the action...a long piece of brass rod with a notch in the end...once the string is in place use a clamp of some sort to hold it onto the hitchpin...vice grip works.   If nothing else the crimped wire will slide under the strings with a little *&^#%@.   You have to hold tension on the wires so they don't want to slide between strings...

  David Ilvedson, RPT
  Pacifica, California



------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Original message


  Hi everyone.  I was tuning my mom's ancient upright (1908) and of course a string broke.  Even worse, it was D#4 and in the area where the strings overlap.  While this was great stringing practice, I have to believe there's a trick to getting the string where it needs to go (and stay there) without hours of heartache and assistance from my dad!  I felt like I was torturing this poor old piano.  Any words of wisdom?

   

  Michelle Smith

  Bastrop, Texas

   

   
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