On Dec 14, 2007 6:21 PM, John Voigt <jvoigt at gwtc.net> wrote: > When I tuned a Yamaha P22 at a school today I was asked if I could fix the > two front casters as they would fall out when the piano had to be lifted, > such as when going over thresh-holds and such. I didn't have my tilter > with > me nor did I have the time to deal with it today. That being said, even > though I have seen the problem before, I have not tried to repair it. I > thought they are held in by a type of spring collar or something. When > the > stem drops out, is there a way (easy or otherwise) to repair it or is > replacement the option? > > John Voigt > > Hi John, Yamaha in their wisdom(read with sarcasm) made the front socket collars much smaller than the back ones however the socket itself is the same size. They don't use a spring collar but rather a machined groove in the stem of the caster that "clicks" past an indent in the socket. After the piano has run into enough thresholds and other objects at breakneck speeds that indent gets straightend out. If you have a friendly janitor(I usually make a point of making friends with them, they have all of the keys!)who has a workroom with a vice ask if you can use it for a few minutes. Place the socket in the vice and using your largest screwdriver or a cold chisel of you have one and a hammer, re-dent the sockets being careful not to smash them. I have placed the caster in the socket and then re-dented to prevent smashing. I then pry the caster out with the large screwdriver and re-install the socket usually with better, longer screws than the original 1" ones. Hope that helps, Mike -- People who say it can't be done, should not interrupt those of us who are doing it. Michael Magness Magness Piano Service 608-786-4404 www.IFixPianos.com email mike at ifixpianos.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/20071214/cf30d19c/attachment.html
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