Flexy S&S D Keys

Richard Brekne ricb at pianostemmer.no
Sat May 3 08:12:10 MDT 2008


Hi


    We should just stipulate that when anyone says "improvement" you
    read it as "change" so we can stop hearing you drone on on this
    point every time someone offers some insight or suggestions about
    improvement, yes improvement, based on their own research and
    experience.

Yes, it would be much more conducive to exchange of ideas if we did 
exactly that... all sides... all fences.


     Further, how can you categorically state that "there are probably
    at least if not 10 times as many who would not (see it as an
    improvement).  What evidence do you have for that?

Here for one place.  One has to only open ones eyes each day one gets up 
out of bed to see that for any given subject matter in any discipline on 
the face of the planet there are a billion experts all with their own 
irrefutable scientific knowledge all somehow very strangely in 
disagreement with each other.  No.. .I havent actually counted 
percentages in this particular case... figured the context made it quite 
clear that it wasn't the numbers that mattered here... it was the 
obvious fact that people disagree... very very often as it were.

Grin... read every post and still havent found anyplace where the 
springy keys syndrom was confirmed in this case.... second hand info 
assumed for beef at this point.  For all we know the action could be 
regulated poorly on this piano...

Cheers
RicB


More information about the Pianotech mailing list

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