Newbe question

pianotune05 at comcast.net pianotune05 at comcast.net
Mon May 1 11:50:10 MDT 2006


Hi William,
You're right about Kimball.  It's a frustrating piano to learn on in my case.  on in, I hope that's correct grammar. ;)  Wild strings false beats, bad tone etc.  
Marshall
ps. is that tie on that pig tied in a full or half winsor?  I'd leave the dress off  and save it for a special occasion. 

-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: "William Benjamin" <pianoboutique at comcast.net> 

Sam,
 
First welcome to the list and glad to have you here.   My input is just my opinion.   Starting with a Kimball piano is a tuff one.   You can put a dress or a tie on a pig and it is still a pig.   Kimball is a very low budget piano and it may frustrate you.   At the same time, you have to start some where.   Yes, what you’re doing is what a lot of us should do in the beginning and I wish you the best of luck.
 
William
 
 
 
 
PIANO BOUTIQUE
William Benjamin
Piano Tuner Extraordinaire
www.pianoboutique.biz
The tuner alone,
preserves the tone.
 



From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Samuel Choy
Sent: Monday, May 01, 2006 10:05 AM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Newbe question
 
Hi,
 
A little introduction,
 
I recently completed the American School of Piano Tuning program and am starting a business, part time at first, as a piano technician. But I am very serious, I've been 10 years in the corporate world and am very sick of it. Seems kind of risky to plan to leave a good paying job at a large company, but I hate what I do now and love pianos.
 
Anyway, I thought the American School of Piano Tuning program was pretty good. There was a link to it off the RTP Web site, so I didn't think that it could be all that bad. However, I don't feel like I have all the skills I need. I feel like I know just enough to be dangerous. So to practice, I  bought myself an old Kimball grand piano (built in the 30s) that was in horrible shape with the intent to fix it up. 
 
The sound board is cracked, the ivories are cracked, the hammers are deeply grooved, and it needs to be restrung. In the action, it looks like a lot of the felts are worn and should be replaced. And it needs to be refinished.
 
At worse, I think that this will be a good education, at best, if I do good job refurbishing it, I could at least get my money back if not make some.
 
Did any of you do anything like this?
 
Also, sorry if this is an old question, but is liquid hide glue as good as the hide glue you have to mix in a heating pot?
 
Thanks.
 
Nice to meet all of you.
 
Sam Choy
Samuel Choy Piano Service
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