(a first for me...) new hammers for 1927 s and s L

piannaman at aol.com piannaman at aol.com
Fri Oct 3 07:59:01 MDT 2008


Hi All,



I want to thank everyone for their opinions and suggestions, both
private and public.? There's definitely more than one way to skin THIS
cat!? I particularly appreciate the offers of help.? Next step is to find out whether the customer needs gen-u-wahn Steinway parts.

Thanks, and I'll keep y'all posted.

 


Dave Stahl, RPT
Dave Stahl Piano Service
dstahlpiano at sbcglobal.net
dstahlpiano.net

 


 

-----Original Message-----
From: piannaman at aol.com
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Sent: Thu, 2 Oct 2008 8:44 am
Subject: Re: (a first for me...) new hammers for 1927 s and s L











 Hi Paul,



Thanks for the input.? The shanks and flanges will also be replaced.





 





Dave Stahl, RPT

Dave Stahl Piano Service

dstahlpiano at sbcglobal.net

dstahlpiano.net



 





 



-----Original Message-----

From: Paul T Williams <pwilliams4 at unlnotes.unl.edu>

To: Pianotech List <pianotech at ptg.org>

Sent: Thu, 2 Oct 2008 8:28 am

Subject: Re: (a first for me...) new hammers for 1927 s and s L















Dave,





I rebuilt a '32 Steinway L two years
ago and used Wally Brook's (Abel) Natural Felt hammers and everyone (piano
faculty) loves it! ?His prices for boring and tapering, etc., are
also very reasonable. ?Otherwise, I'd go with Steinway hammers. ?Are
the shanks/flanges and knuckles good enough to keep for the whole new life
of the hammers? Always think ahead....(why do I know this??? ;>) ?)





Paul T. Williams RPT


Piano Technician


University of Nebraska


Lincoln, NE


pwilliams4 at unl.edu





















piannaman at aol.com 


Sent by: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org


10/02/2008 10:10 AM









Please respond to


Pianotech List <pianotech at ptg.org>























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(a first for me...) new hammers for
1927 s and s L








































Liszters,





I have a customer, who also happens to have a son who's a classmate of
my son, who has an old L that's in pretty good shape, except the hammers
are shot. ?No room for shaping left on them. ?But the strings
are good, board is good, block is good . It's pretty solid all-round. ?So
after years of being pretty much strictly a home-service guy, I'm going
to jump in and put a new set of hammers on this piano. ?It will be
the first complete set I've ever replaced. ?





I have had a few suggestions from folks on type of hammer, notably Steinway(sticking
with the original, expensive) and Abel (more ready out-of-the-box, cheaper).
I like the Ronsen VFGs that are on my Mason, too, but am not sure they'd
match up well with the Steinway. ? I was assuming that I'd go with
Steinway, but I need to ask the customer if authentic Steinway parts are
necessary. ?Since I'm not tooled up to bore my own hammers, I'll probably
get them pre-bored/pre-hung. ?





Any suggestions or input would be welcomed. ? 





Dave Stahl, RPT


Dave Stahl Piano Service


dstahlpiano at sbcglobal.net


dstahlpiano.net





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