[pianotech] Strange Customer Complaint

Laura Read lauraread at earthlink.net
Wed Jun 24 20:46:16 MDT 2009


I had a similar case recently with an old A.B. Chase grand. This customer
also wanted to go through the individual notes and have me detune the
unisons. Ouch! But then the customer is always right, or so they say..

 

Laura Read

 

From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of Ken & Pat Gerler
Sent: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 8:25 PM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [pianotech] Strange Customer Complaint

 

It is like the customer I had with an Acrosonic. After tuning it and leaving
an Acrosonic as in good of tune as it can have, I get a call that it doesn't
sound right. Culmination after two trips was to set the unisons about 3 to 5
cents off of each other and she was as "happy as a lark".

 

Ken Gerler

 

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

From: Dean May <mailto:deanmay at pianorebuilders.com>  

To: pianotech at ptg.org 

Sent: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 12:12 PM

Subject: Re: [pianotech] Strange Customer Complaint

 

Back when I was a mechanic in school days our best customers/most
satisfied/easiest to please were the ones who either knew nothing about cars
or those who knew a lot about them. Our worst customers were the ones who
knew a little about cars. 

 

I just lost a nice church account that I had been tuning twice a year for
the last 4-5 years. They had 2 pianos, a C3 and a P22. The music director
was a retired school teacher that complained the P22 was badly out of tune
right after I had tuned it (4-5 years of regular service with no complaints,
now the piano is "badly out of tune"). I go check it, sounds good to me, I
touch it up. Still a complaint. I go back out and completely retune the
piano. Still "badly" out. I set up a special appointment to go back out when
the complainer is there to have him demonstrate to me what is wrong with the
piano. He starts playing individual notes (when they do that you know you
are in trouble) going down from C4 chromatically until he gets around the
break area ( I really don't remember what the note was) and said, "hear
that? That sounds awful." Of course, it's a P22 and it sounds bad at the
break. 

 

I demonstrate to him that it is in tune. He has a hard time with the
interval thing (he's in his 60s and admits his hearing is going), so I just
show him by octaves. I put my hammer on a pin and take it a little sharp and
a little flat so he can hear the difference in the octave and when it comes
in tune. I then show him on the TuneLab software how it is dead on. Then, as
I am showing what happens when I bring it a little sharp, he is wanting me
to leave select notes 5-8 cents sharp because the bass section in his choir
is tending to sing flat!!!!

 

As politely as I can I tell him that would be impossible for me to do and
leave my name on the tuning. 

 

Of course since he is retired high school music teacher in the community the
worship committee considers him to be god in all things related to music. So
after three free service calls (25 miles one way) to prove that he has no
idea what he is talking about (I point out that the C3 is actually out of
tune by this time but no complaints on it) they decide they are going to use
another tuner. And now I just lost another good account of the same
denomination due to I'm sure his tarnishing of my reputation. 

 

It ain't right but there's not much you can do about it except shrug it off
and keep doing quality work. A curse without a cause will not alight. 

 

Dean

Dean May             cell 812.239.3359 

PianoRebuilders.com   812.235.5272 

Terre Haute IN  47802

 

  _____  

From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of Ryan Sowers
Sent: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 12:31 PM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [pianotech] Strange Customer Complaint

 

Oh! I meant to mention that she was a teacher too!

On Wed, Jun 24, 2009 at 9:31 AM, Ryan Sowers <tunerryan at gmail.com> wrote:


Here's another one!

I had a client of many years call me back once after I had worked on her new
grand (she had a U-1 before that). She said I didn't get the action back in
right. So, I went back as soon as I could. It turned out that she had
noticed that there was more space between note 88 and the cheek then on note
1! She seemed skeptical at first when I explained to her that it needed that
space for the shift pedal, but was finally convinced. 

 

On Wed, Jun 24, 2009 at 5:40 AM, Tom Driscoll <tomtuner at verizon.net> wrote:

 

Subject: [pianotech] Strange Customer Complaint

 

Had a music teacher ring today to complain about the tune done on the school
piano yesterday. The complaint was, the top 1 & 1/2 octaves of the piano
constantly sustain when the notes were played! After I explained that it was
because there was no dampers on that part of the piano, he calmed down a
bit. I'm guessing piano mightn't be his specialty instrument!

 

Alastair.

David Lawson's Pianos

Wangaratta

Australia

 

David,

 How about the music teacher complaining that the middle pedal isn't working
on her grand piano?She pushes it down and nothing happens!

Tom Driscoll





-- 
Ryan Sowers, RPT
Puget Sound Chapter
Olympia, WA
www.pianova.net




-- 
Ryan Sowers, RPT
Puget Sound Chapter
Olympia, WA
www.pianova.net

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