WD40

Dean May deanmay at pianorebuilders.com
Thu Jul 19 07:42:53 MDT 2007


I had the same experience on an old Kimball action that I tracked for a few
years after application. Seemingly no residual bad effects. 

Dean

Dean May             cell 812.239.3359 

PianoRebuilders.com   812.235.5272 

Terre Haute IN  47802

-----Original Message-----
From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of David Boyce
Sent: Thursday, July 19, 2007 7:43 AM
To: Pianotech List
Subject: WD40

On Monday I tuned the old birdcage upright of a work colleague.  This is the

sole piano on which I have ever used WD40 on the action.

I first tuned it about eight years ago. When I came to it, the action was 
extremely sluggish, with notes just not repeating, and keys staying down. 
When I pulled the action out to look at the centres, I found that at some 
time in the past, the centres had all had been oiled.
Moving a hammer flange with my finger, it moved with an evil slow oleaginous

resistance. I  could see sludge around the bushings.

What to do?  The piano was cetainly not worth repinning and rebushing.  I 
suggested to my colleague and her husband that, as the piano was virtually 
unplayable as it was, I could try WD40 to see if it would re-liquify the old

oil that had dried to varnish consistency, and at least get the action 
moving, presuming that the wood of the flanges had not swollen.

They agreed to try this.  It was spectacularly sucessful.  I had to do a 
large pitch raise, so went back in a few days to fine tune, and advised them

to let the kids and their friends play as much as possible.  The action 
completely freed up!  And, free it has remained in the years since, with no 
fiurther applications needed.

So, while I would never ever in normal circumstances put WD40 near an 
action, in this case it did just what was needed.

David. 





More information about the Pianotech mailing list

This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC