[pianotech] Kimball Whitney Spinet

Gerald Groot tunerboy3 at comcast.net
Tue Jun 16 14:12:53 MDT 2009


Then I would have to re-pin all of the stickers too.  I would rather not.
It all came out okay.  Now the fun part begins.  Putting it back into the
piano, hooking it up again to the keys and regulating it.  yippee, I can
hardly wait.  ;-)

 

From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of wimblees at aol.com
Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 12:17 AM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [pianotech] Kimball Whitney Spinet

 

Jerry

Would it be easier to replace all the stickers, along with the grommets? 

Wim

-----Original Message-----
From: Gerald Groot <tunerboy3 at comcast.net>
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Sent: Mon, Jun 15, 2009 5:18 pm
Subject: [pianotech] Kimball Whitney Spinet

Our favorite piano... But, a very good customer. 

I've been tuning this piano like clockwork every year for the past 25 years
or more during the last week in January. Very well taken care of except for
the fact that the rubber grommets were getting very noisy and brittle. 

Today, I took the action to my shop. Remember how they put in those screws?
Those 20 foot long screws? RAM them in without pre-drilling or proper sized
drilling? What a miserable thing to take apart! Even the fall board screws
were jammed in. I had all I could do to get them out without stripping the
slot in the flat head screws. 

Then, I had to literally jam the grommets off from the keys as carefully as
possible with a screwdriver. No way could I pull them off they were like,
frozen in place. It was then, that I discovered sometime in the past year or
two, I hadn't noticed it before, there was mice piss all over the place. On
the stickers, the threads, the grommets, prongs on the ends of the keys etc.
What a fricken mess. Talk about RUST??? It's all over those parts. 

Now, I am deciding on the best course of action to remove the rust. I'm
thinking, either good old fashioned steel wool or a drill with a wire brush
perhaps? However, I do not want to ruin the threads either. Someone
mentioned using "Never Dull" but, I've not tried it on rust before. Works
great on brass or balance rail pins..

Anyway, I will be working on this action tomorrow in the shop. Any bright
ideas out there for removing this rust easily besides good old fashioned
elbow grease?

 

Thanks,

Jer

Jerry.5

 

 


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