[pianotech] Lester Console, was Lester Spinet

Greg Newell gnewell at ameritech.net
Wed Jul 14 20:35:40 MDT 2010


Man, did I call that one or what?!

Greg Newell
Greg's Piano Forté
www.gregspianoforte.com
216-226-3791 (office)
216-470-8634 (mobile)

-----Original Message-----
From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of Rob McCall
Sent: Wednesday, July 14, 2010 6:53 PM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [pianotech] Lester Console, was Lester Spinet

Thanks to everyone who replied to my message. The insight I've gleaned from
this conversation will come in handy someday.  Unfortunately, it wasn't
today!  :-)

I arrived at the appointment and was led to a Lester piano.  But it was
taller...  Turned out to be a console from 1946.  Had the cutout ends off
the back of the keys and a very compact action.  It did have some plastic
parts in an unbroken state, including the backchecks and the back end of the
wippen, which had a capstan screw drilled through and inserted through the
plastic and facing downward on to the back end of the key.

The problems were many, including: several loose hammer flanges, bass
dampers that wouldn't dampen and would only raise with the key but not with
the pedal (above the break was fine), numerous sticking keys, broken
keytops, one broken key (E5, at the balance rail pin), etc.

When they bought the piano, they thought it was 15 years old.  They only
missed by 49 years!

Anyway, I was going over the items with the wife and she seemed agreeable,
but wanted to spread out the repairs for her budget. I was telling her the
most important things that needed to be fixed, when Sergeant Husband walked
in, overhearing our conversation, and very loudly stated, "We are NOT
spending anymore money on this piano, I already spent $125 buying it!  It
just needs to be tuned and that'll be good enough for the kids!"

So, it got a 60-100 cent pitch raise and a tuning...  and a shy smile from
the wife who told me to email her the list of needed repairs...  :-)

So we'll see how this goes!

Regards,

Rob McCall

McCall Piano Service, LLC
www.mccallpiano.com
Murrieta, CA
951-698-1875



On Jul 14, 2010, at 04:43 , Gerald Groot wrote:

> If you're lucky, the previous tuner replaced them with wooden elbow's.  I
> remember about 30 years ago, Yat Lam Hong asking me what I used to replace
> elbow's.  My answer?  Clip on plastic elbows.  I thought it was the norm.
> His response?  "Why you use plastic to replace plastic?  Why not use wood?
> Won't break."  Logical response.  Since then, that's what I've done. He's
> right.  Sometimes the clip ons break again, especially years later.
Wooden
> ones will not.  
> 
> Jer



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