Regulating Without Specs

BobDavis88 at aol.com BobDavis88 at aol.com
Mon Feb 4 23:41:39 MST 2008


 
In a message dated 2/4/2008 6:31:22 PM Pacific Standard Time, 
a440 at bresnan.net writes:

you can directly measure the hammer movement that results from key movement. 

This can be useful information, to be sure, when doing action trouble 
assessment. However, action ratio measured in this way is not exact, as the ratio 
changes during the stroke, due to changing contact points between the hammer and 
wippen, rolling of the capstan/heel contact, changes of the contact point at 
the balance rail punching, etc. The hammer movement at 6mm key travel will not 
always be twice what it is at 3mm. This is why I like just to regulate a 
sample note completely, using 1.75 blow, and see what kind of dip it produces - it 
just eliminates the complications, seems more straightforward, and takes very 
little time. (1.75 blow barring indications otherwise, like the shank winding 
up way off the cushion). Then I can decide whether to compromise the hammer 
travel or the key travel; and what the ramifications are for hammer head weight 
and action inertia.
 
Actually, it makes sense to set up a note at or near each end of the 
keyboard. The key ratio is not always the same from one end to the other, even on 
"precision" pianos. I regulated a Yamaha C7 on which the ratio was noticeably 
different end to end, and have found the same on other good makes.
 
Bob Davis



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