[pianotech] prepping before sale

Gregor _ karlkaputt at hotmail.com
Sun Nov 29 00:56:53 MST 2009


Wow, hard stuff. I don´t know which brand you are talking about, but why is this manufacturer still in business? Who would like to sell these financial boomerangs? I mean it pays off only when the margin is extremely high and the price is extremely low. Then the customer would perhaps accept a lousy piano and the dealer would accept some prepp work. But even that business model does not seem to be reasonable. 

Strange business.

Gregor

------------------------------------------
piano technician - tuner - dealer
Münster, Germany
www.weldert.de




From: tunerboy3 at comcast.net
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Date: Sat, 28 Nov 2009 19:17:16 -0500
Subject: Re: [pianotech] prepping before sale



















Personally, what I am encountering are things such as very shallow
key dip which is causing terrible bobbling hammers.  I am finding terribly
unregulated pianos in general.  

Now, these particular pianos that I am talking about are pianos that
are brand new pianos.  It is also the same manufacturer.  Although, I do
encounter this with other brands but not to this extent.  

 

Rather than prepping them in the store or at least removing them
from the crate and checking them first, many times, the store will drop them
off still uncrated; opening up the crate at the location leaving the total prep
work up to the tuner.  In many instances, that technician is me.  There is a
LOT of prep work in most but not all cases.  

 

Over the years, I have found things such as loose pedal lyres. 
Pedal lyres coming unglued from not only the top of the lyre but from the
bottom box as well.   I am finding damper upstop rails that will not stay put
unless you drill a hole through it to secure it.  You can adjust and tighten it
down as HARD as you want but yet, within a few months to a year, it has come
loose again allowing dampers to "clank" on the upswing.  Yes, I
regulate the pedals and make sure the dampers are not forcing it upward but
yet, the screws work themselves loose again and again and again.    

 

I am finding very noisy squeaking pedals on both grand's and
verticals.  I am finding squeaking key beds when the soft pedal is used on grand's. 
I am finding knocking keybeds on grand's.  

 

I have found MANY loose hammer heads, loose hammer butts, loose
butt heels, loose shanks and warped hammer shanks.  I am also finding key beds
that are apparently moving from seasonal changes.  Now, I am not positive about
the cause of this last one but this is the most sensible cause to me and I
suppose it could be something else.  If so, I'm not sure what.  Yet, when I ask
the factory what they think the cause and fix is via email, I do not get an
answer.  

 

You know what?  I am even finding loose tuning pins.    

 

I can regulate the vertical's in August at which time it may have
bobbling hammers.  Many times by February with the weather being completely
different, the opposite has taken place.  Now I have hammers blocking on the
strings.  I can regulate it again in December, January or February and then by next
July or August, the opposite has once again taken place.  They are bobbling
again and also have shallow keydip.  Their excuse is weather changes.  Oh yeah? 
Then why don't I have the same problem with most other brands?  

 

I have talked with the manufacturer dozens and dozens of times over
the years and have even met with them about this.  While I have seen "some
improvement" after 5-10 years of informing them about it, the improvement
is not yet good enough----actually, it is far from it.  Therefore, I no longer
recommend that brand to any of my clients.  I sell a lot of pianos for the
dealers through my recommendations so they are losing plenty of sales over it. 


 

Now, wouldn’t you think they would listen to us out there in the
field and improve and prevent instead of ignorning us?  This is what I hear most
often from both the dealer and manufacturer.  "We've never heard this
before" or, "we've never heard this from anyone else."  What do
they think we are, stupid?  To that, I say BULL!!!  Because in talking with many
other techs about it, many of them are encountering the same things on these
same pianos.  

 

I see no excuse for pianos leaving the factory in this kind of
condition.   

 

I'm sure many of you have encountered these same things and know
exactly what brand piano I am referring too but please keep it silent.  They
too, know who they are.  

 

There is simply no reason why any piano should leave the factory like
this.  

 

Jer  

 



From:
pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of wimblees at aol.com

Sent: Saturday, November 28, 2009 3:57 PM

To: pianotech at ptg.org

Subject: Re: [pianotech] prepping before sale



 



Gregor.





 





As I said in a previous post, there are some dealers who are very
fastidious about making sure their pianos are prepped before they leave the
store. But for the most part, regardless of the quality of their pianos, the most
a dealer will do after un-crating a piano, is have it tuned, and perhaps make
minor repairs to sticking keys or hanging up dampers. The tuners are often
those who have been in the business for only a short period of time, and
are still developing their skills. As a result, even if their tuning technique
is satisfactory, they do not have the know how to evaluate what else needs to
be done to the piano to make it play and sound better. Even if the tuner
has enough experience to make the necessary regulations, some dealers don't
want to spend the money to have the work done. 





 





When I first got to Hawaii, I started working for dealer
who carries middle of the road products, and a high end grand piano line.
He allowed me to spend 6 hours prepping one of his new high end grands. When I
mentioned this to another tuner who had been working for this dealer, he
said he never got permission to do that kind of prep work. 





 





When I worked for a dealer in Alabama, he would give me permission
to do what ever it took to make the pianos right. But what he would not do is
let me call the customer to schedule an appointment to tune the piano after it
was delivered. He would give them a coupon good for a free piano tuning, but it
was good for only 6 months. Most customers would call me after about 2
years, but the dealer would honor the "coupon", except that the
customer would have to pay me the difference between my pitch raise fee, and my
normal tuning fee. And any time the customer called with a complaint, I
had permission to do what ever it took to make the piano right, and he would
pay me. 





 





When I owned a store in St.
Louis, all of the new pianos that arrived got a good going over, either by
me, or one of my employees. I didn't care how long it took to get the piano
"right". My used pianos, too, were made to play, sound, and look, as
good as they could, without doing major replacement of parts, unless the piano
was worth it. 







Willem (Wim) Blees, RPT 

Piano Tuner/Technician





94-505 Kealakaa Str. 





Mililani, Oahu, HI  96789

808-349-2943 





www.Bleespiano.com

Author of: 

The Business of Piano Tuning 

available from Potter Press 

www.pianotuning.com





 



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

From: Gregor _ <karlkaputt at hotmail.com>

To: pianotech at ptg.org

Sent: Sat, Nov 28, 2009 12:08 am

Subject: [pianotech] prepping before sale



I miss a point in the ongoing
prepping discussion: what do you exactly do before you sale a new piano?
Regarding all the posts one could assume that new pianos arrive in a wimpy
condition at the dealer. Is it really so? Perhaps we should differentiate
between high and low end pianos. As a dealer I would accept that a low budget
piano arrives in another condition than a high end piano.



In the first line I sell used upright pianos and I have only one brand in stock
that I sell new: Wendl & Lung. Although it´s a low budget piano it arrives
in a very good condition in my store. When they arrive in Germany a German
collegue makes the end control and some prepp work, e.g. string seating, string
mating, tuning, voicing and a rough contoll of the regulation. Not till then it
gets delivered to the dealers. My part is to work on the key balance holes,
tightening the action screws and to tweak the regulation if needed or desired.
But I am talking about a economically priced Chinese piano, so I don´t care
about a key drop of 10.5 mm instead of 10 mm. I seldom refine the regulation
and I had many professional players or teachers in my store who were thrilled
not oly about the sound but also about how they can play the action just in the
condition the piano arrived at my store.



Will mentioned that many manufacturers don´t pound in the pianos. I can´t
belive that. I am sure that e.g. every German factory uses a pounding in machine
and even a Chinese producer like Wendl & Lung (Hailun) uses it. Look at the
video on step 8. Delivery without pounding in is senseless and I think even
most of the cheap manufacturers are aware of it.



http://www.wendl-lung.com/jart/prj3/wendl_lung/main.jart?rel=en&content-id=1225437990106&reserve-mode=active ;




Selling an used piano is another story. This is what I do on every used upright
(I seldom work on grands):



-string seating

-tightening all action screws and if necessary changing center pins

-lubricating damper springs and damper rod

-hammer reshaping

-burning hammer shanks

-travelling hammers

-hammer string mating

-polishing and lubricating key pins and capstans

-key levelling

-regulation and voicing

-new felts on trapwork



With used pianos I get paid for that work with my margin. New pianos should
leave my store in the same prepped state, but they require much less work, at
least the Wendl & Lung. I can´t compare with other brands as I don´t sell
other brands. So, what are your experiences with other brands? What has to be
done?



Gregor









------------------------------------------

piano technician - tuner - dealer

Münster, Germany

www.weldert.de













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