Thanks Marshall. Another important tip about A-C# 3rd. For years been wondering these 3 3rds and what tuners are trying to hear and achieve. Thanks! Lim Sent from my BlackBerry Wireless Handheld Powered by Gee! from StarHub -----Original Message----- From: Marshall Gisondi <pianotune05 at hotmail.com> Sender: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org Date: Tue, 1 Feb 2011 23:50:59 To: <pianotech at ptg.org> Reply-To: pianotech at ptg.org Subject: [pianotech] 4ths 5ths Hi Susan, That smigeon sure comes in handy. I always feel the need to check with a test especially on lousey pianos that have a ton of inharmonisity. The fourth will still sound too wild but wil test OK with that 3rd 6th test. Do you use the 6th 10th test with the 5ths? Lim we were taught at the school to have an even progression that the contiguous thirds should progress the step from f3 and a3 third to a to c#4 should not be to big of a jump but have an increase in speed. I find on some pianos that the contiguous 3rds seem really close in speed that there isn't much room to widen the octave. Do you guys eve run into this on cheap pianos? Marshall Marshall Gisondi Piano Technician Marshall's Piano Service pianotune05 at hotmail.com 215-510-9400 www.phillytuner.com Graduate of The School of Piano Technology for the Blind www.pianotuningschool.org Vancouver, WA -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://ptg.org/pipermail/pianotech.php/attachments/20110202/341840e1/attachment.htm>
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