Here is more detail on my Chickering monkey problem. The top of the monkey moves front and back when it rotates the sustenuto rod.The constraining spring in the middle acts as a fulcrum. So then the bottom of the monkey slips off the pitman frontwards and backwards. It does not slip off sideways because it is constrained on the sides by the guides.The monkey looks like a Steinway type, but the sustenuto mechanism is not attached to the action in this old Chickering. So the "next poor sucker" -will- be able to pull the action.Downsizing the pitman hole will not affect the slipping of the monkey since it does not travel through the hole. Please continue with your valuable feedback.Carman Gentile RPT===================================================There's a Chickering with a Steinway style monkey? If so, how can it slip off the pitman when it's constrained fore and aft by the spring, and port and starboard by the guides? Doesn't geometrically compute. If you pin it to the pitman. how does the next poor sucker pull the action? Again, doesn't compute. A rational real world mechanical assessment of what's there will determine the fix. Perform one, or find someone who can. Ron N Carman, List, Ron addressed one of the following questions, but I'll say it in another way. After all, repetition does play a role in our lives. If it is the monkey slipping off the pitman, is there no way that you can restrain the movement of the monkey fore and aft without restraining its function? If the movement of the pitman Is causing the monkey to slip off, is there no way that you can downsize the hole the pitman travels through to minimize the fore and aft movement? Or possibly a combination of both? Keith -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://ptg.org/pipermail/pianotech.php/attachments/20090705/fb2fbeab/attachment.htm>
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