[pianotech] Smoke Damage Appraisal

wimblees at aol.com wimblees at aol.com
Tue May 5 01:36:57 PDT 2009


Diane

Smoke residue?on the strings does not?always have an immediate effect. It might take three or four years for the acid from the smoke to "eat" through the metal. As I said before, the problem is not on the speaking length of the string.?The problems are at the termination points. If you don't restring the piano now, strings will break?later, long after the insurance is no? longer covering the expense. 


Wim

-----Original Message-----
From: Diane Hofstetter <dianepianotuner at msn.com>
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Sent: Mon, 4 May 2009 7:16 pm
Subject: [pianotech] Smoke Damage Appraisal





Greg,
 
I am in the process of cleaning the  most severely smoke damaged piano that I 
have ever had to work on.  It is a Yamaha GH1.  The piano body and case have 
been thoroughly cleaned by one of the shop guys and have been  sitting in a room 
with an ozone generator for two weeks now, but still smell of smoke. I think it 
may be because there is smoke residue all over the floor from the cleaning 
process.  Tomorrow we are going to work on it together.
 
The boss doesn't want to restring the piano.  It will be the first smoke-damaged 
piano that I haven't restrung.  It will be interesting to see when I try to tune 
it, 1. whether strings will break and 2. How it sounds.  The boss may have no 
choice.
 
Meanwhile I have bead blasted the action and keys and have shaped the hammers.  
I have used TSP on the keyframe, and have set the action outside in the sunlight 
and fresh air for about 5 hours total (two times).  The action smells just great 
now without changing any of the parts.
 
Be sure when you give the church an estimate to plan on at least double your 
usual cleaning charge.
 
Diane
 
 
[pianotech] Smoke Damage Appraisalwimblees at aol.com wimblees at aol.com 



GregIt all depends on the pianos. On an upright, if the fall board?was closed, 
then most likely the only thing that needs to be done is for the case to be 
thoroughly cleaned. If the fall board was open, you will also?have to clean the 
keys, or maybe get new tops put on. Grand pianos, however are much 
different.?Smoke probably got inside, even with?the lid?down. Smoke is very 
caustic, especially on felts and strings. You can clean the strings, but that is 
not where the problem lies. It's at the pressure points, like the bridge 
pins,?V-bar, at the tuning pins, etc., where the smoke causes problems. Which 
means the strings have to be replaced, along with the felts. You will also need 
to look closely at the action. If you see smoke damage on the hammers, it means 
all the felts have been "infected" with smoke. Which means all the action 
parts 
will need to be replaced. Hope this helps. Willem (Wim) Blees, RPTPiano 
Tuner/TechnicianMililani, Oahu, HI808-349-2943Author of: The Business of Piano 
Tuningavailable from Potter Presswww.pianotuning.comDiane Hofstetter

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