[pianotech] Glass cleaner to remove cigarette tar, how to bag a piano, and other piano-cleaning fun...

Dean May deanmay at pianorebuilders.com
Thu May 17 07:02:44 MDT 2012


I've found the Rain-X brand glass cleaner works great on high polish poly
finishes. 

 

Dean

Dean W May                        (812) 235-5272 voice and text

PianoRebuilders.com           (888) DEAN-MAY         

Terre Haute IN 47802           Give us a LIKE on Facebook! Go to
<https://www.facebook.com/pages/PianoRebuilderscom/137780082943148>
PianoRebuilders.com

  _____  

From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of Piano Boutique
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2012 8:34 AM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [pianotech] Glass cleaner to remove cigarette tar,how to bag a
piano, and other piano-cleaning fun...

 

If you are going to consider a glass cleaner, you might try glass plus.
Unlike Windex, it has no ammonia and will not damage the finish.

 

William

 

 

 

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

From: Euphonious Thumpe <mailto:lclgcnp at yahoo.com>  

To: pianotech at ptg.org ; pianotech at ptg.org 

Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2012 6:48 PM

Subject: Re: [pianotech] Glass cleaner to remove cigarette tar,how to bag a
piano, and other piano-cleaning fun...

 


Thanks. I truly appreciate the suggestion, and indeed did go to the store to
check out "Scrubbing Bubbles" on my way to "slay this dragon". But all the
varieties at the Publix here had some sort of scent, so I held off and just
got more glass cleaner. ( Publix brand has a milder, less headache-inducing
odor than, say, Windex, that also goes away faster.) I had a very bad
experience with Febreze years ago ( left a weird smell in a piano that made
me quite ill) so I'm wary. But I do intend to get some "Scrubbing Bubbles"
tonight, which I'll try on a junk piano part to see if the perfume goes away
enough for me.
Related news: I went to the office of the nice, climate-controlled storage
facility where this Chickering Ampico now "lives", and noticed several sizes
of mattress bags for sale. I bought the king-sized ( for $4) and found that
it fit very nicely over this on-its-side, 5'8" grand, "quarantining" it
until I can get it all cleaned. (Yay!!!) And just now realized that such a
bag (a fresh one) will also be PERFECT for pumping ozone into (from my
$800-- small version-- ozone generator) once all accessible, overt
contamination has been removed. I know the ozone will damage all the rubber
stuff, but all the bellows cloth and tubing need replacement, anyhow.

Peace,
Thumpe

 


  _____  


From: Douglas Gregg <classicpianodoc at gmail.com>; 
To: pianotech <pianotech at ptg.org>; 
Subject: [pianotech] Glass cleaner to remove cigarette tar and other
piano-cleaning fun... 
Sent: Wed, May 16, 2012 3:15:47 PM 


Trumpe,
I have had the same kind of piano in my shop and it really does stink
up the place. I have had wonderful success with  Dow Scrubbing Bubbles
Bathroom Cleaner. It  has done the trick without water  rinsing. Spray
the bubbles on, watch the brown tar and nicotine float off and blow
them off or vacuum them up  with a strong shopvac (large cantainer
type to catch the foam). In some cases I have also used a McCulloch
steamer to blow the bubbles and crap with high pressure steam to a
place where it can be absorbed with paper towels. The combination of
steam and Scrubbing Bubbles  works very well. Finally blow dry with
compressed air or a Metro Vac or leaf blower. You can use it on all
hard surfaces and strip  felt. I avoid leather and hammer heads. You
have to try this. The Scrubbing bubbles comes  in a tall green colored
aerosol can. I like it better than Super Clean. Much easier to use and
works better too.

Doug Gregg
Classic Piano Doc
Southold, NY

Date: Wed, 16 May 2012 02:43:40 -0700 (PDT)
From: Euphonious Thumpe <lclgcnp at yahoo.com <javascript:return> >
To: pianotech at ptg.org <javascript:return> 
Subject: [pianotech] Glass cleaner to remove cigarette tar and other
      piano-cleaning fun...
Message-ID:
      <1337161420.17649.YahooMailMobile at web114718.mail.gq1.yahoo.com
<javascript:return> >
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"

    Got a "free" Chickering Ampico grand w/500 rolls last month. I
put that in quotes because the stench of tobacco tar on this one is
truly atrocious. ( Terribly stinking up my shop.) I was able to take
all the removable case parts (refinished maybe 30 years ago) outside
and spray them with "Purple Power" ( cheaper version of Castrol's
"Super Clean" that doesn't have the lye smell "Super Clean" now
has, that doesn't rinse out) and scrub them with a green
Scotch-Brite pad and hose off and quickly dry. After 2 such
scrubbings, the smell is only barely detectable and this remainder
will come out during refinishing, I trust.
    The main body of the piano is a "different animal", though. So far
I've hit it with glass cleaner and wiped with paper towels --- but
how am I going to really get the smell out of the underside? (After
removing the player system, of course.) Blasting with Purple Power and
a hose sounds too potentially damaging. (Even if quickly dried, and
after the plate and strings are out.) Suggestions appreciated. I'm
anticipating a lot of hand-wiping and then bagging the thing and
blasting with high-concentration ozone for a while, and I'll
report on how well that works. But any other ideas on how to clean all
the parts and get thje smell out would be appreciated.
    As far as the rolls goes: I've been vacuuming off the boxes
and then wiping them with naptha-soaked paper towels, which seems to
be getting some of the tar off the cardboard, without disturbing the
ink on them.

Sincerely,
Thumpe

 

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