[pianotech] Rusty Steinway M

wimblees at aol.com wimblees at aol.com
Mon Dec 8 23:15:47 PST 2008


Stephen

The insurance company will try to tell you,and the customer, that a lot of the damage to the piano was done before the flood. Don't believe it. The flood caused all sorts of problems that are not related to age. The rusty strings are only the tip of the iceberg. Even if there a little rust of the strings, the amount of water from the flood caused them to corrode to the point where they are breaking. Even the agraffs are breaking, which should give them a clue. Then there is the pin block and the soundboard. Because of the excess moisture in the air, they will eventually crack. It might take several years, but it would have been caused by the excess moisture. Then there are the action parts. The spring, center pins, felts, etc, will all have been effected in some way by the excess moisture.

You're obligation to the customer is to insist that the piano needs to be rebuilt, including soundboard, pinblock, strings, action etc. The insurance company will fight this, tooth and nail, but they need to be educated. Your job is to do that. 

I hope the customer has flood damage insurance. They may need a lawyer, too. 


Willem (Wim) Blees, RPT
Piano Tuner/Technician
Mililani, Oahu, HI
808-349-2943
Author of: 
The Business of Piano Tuning
available from Potter Press
www.pianotuning.com


-----Original Message-----
From: Steven Hopp <hoppsmusic at hotmail.com>
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Sent: Mon, 8 Dec 2008 5:04 pm
Subject: [pianotech] Rusty Steinway M


Hello,
 
I was called to give my ev
aluation of a Steinway M that was in a home flood.  The water reached a few to several inches deep in the room and lasted about 12 hours before clean-up started.  The clean up crew at one point used dehumidifiers that ultimately pulled over 5 gallons of water from the air in the room housing the piano.
 
Upon evalution I saw unbelivable rust on the tuning pins and the first 2 inches of the strings.  OK maybe not unbelivable but really significant.  Also one agraffe was broken.  The customer seemed suprised by this and stated only that she could tell it was not the same as before the flood.  The case is in fair shape with some spots needing refinishing from scratches.
 
The difficulty is this is an insurance claim and I can not honestly say whether such a rust condition happened in the last year and was caused by the flood.  I want to be honest and still assist my customer. My customer insits that it was not like this a year ago.  
 
Does anyone think this condition could happen that soon?  I have pictures and would be willing to and am asking for help off list because my pictures are large files and I think the administrator doesn't like them?  I am also hoping to speak to someone in the central texas or eastern new mexico or Oklahoma area who might like to help me do the restoration.  I am nowhere near qualified to tackle such a project.  My contact information is as follows:
 
Steven J. Hopp
hoppsmusic
@hotmail.com
432-770-7473
 
Many thanks for replies and interest. 

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