Stephen -- Thank you for including Jim's message in your reply. It appears as if my trusty spam filter prevented me from ever receiving it. Thanks to Jim, Stephen and David for this suggestion. Yes, it is definitely a case of sizzling dampers. And their being hard and/or crusty was what I was thinking. How to go about remedying that was what I was looking for and, once again, this listserver has come to the rescue. Fortunately this client is a decades old friend, and he is also aware that this is not the result of anything I did. He's aware that piano's require a bit of sorcery once in a while, and "oinking" the dampers sounds like the right solution. And fortunately it's not a difficult procedure. Thanks everyone! -- Geoff Sykes -- Assoc. Los Angeles -----Original Message----- From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Stephen Papastephanou Sent: Sunday, November 19, 2006 8:33 AM To: Pianotech List Subject: Re: Sudden damper buzz syndrome I had the exact same experience with a Yamaha C7 and the cure prescribed below cured immediately the problem. S.P. On 11/19/06 12:15 AM, "WilsonianJ at aol.com" <WilsonianJ at aol.com> wrote: Dear Geoff, I have a sneaking suspicion that the dampers are "crusty" and are "sizzling" upon contact with the strings. Your client may have only now noticed after listening more intently to your tuning. I highly doubt that the issue was caused by your tuning, but your client may believe differently. The quick fix for sizzling dampers is to remove the damper and soften the felt a bit. It doesn't take much so if you very conservatively scratch the surface of the felt, you should ameliorate the problem. Roughing up the felt too much will cause leaking dampers. Try it on one or two first to see if that's the problem. Good luck, Geoff, Jim Wilson, RPT L.A. Chapter In a message dated 11/18/06 7:34:07 PM, thetuner at ivories52.com writes: Greetings all -- Last week I tuned a customers Kawai grand piano. The customer was out of town so he left me a key to his studio. He returned the other day and while he is happy with the tuning and the other repair work I completed he mentioned that all the wound strings are now exhibiting a buzz when the damper comes into contact with the played string. Once the damper has completely engaged the buzzing stops and the strings damp correctly. He says it is objectionably noticeable only on the entire wound bass string section of the piano. This is not something that I noticed while I was there so I'm curios as to your thoughts on what could have caused this and what I might be able to do to affect a timely fix. FWIW, he lives a couple of miles from the beach but has a DC de-humidifier installed. The piano also lives in a small, relatively well sealed but otherwise non-climate controlled garage studio. -- Geoff Sykes -- Assoc. Los Angeles. -- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/20061119/9ef71412/attachment.html
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