Hi Keith
I also have found the disscussion interesting and informative, and I
think Ron perhaps underestimates the interest out there. A disscussion
is/goes where ever oneself makes of it in my experience, and for me this
one has provoked some new thoughts and jogged some old ones. I would
think given the rising interest in rebuilding and the potential costs
savings this has for Universities along with general climate control
ammo to use in approaching administrations.... this kind of thing should
be of more then passing interest to most university techs.
Good luck in your pursuits down the road Keith
Cheers
RicB
I find the discussion of interest because recently I have just been
able to
shape a few ribs and diaphram a board and I had 2 1/2 years of
engineering
at UCSB. I am best at visualation so I am creating a picture that I can
model. By the end of the spring semester 08 I should be ready to
enroll in a
school at the level of a Junior to finish that degree.
I will be looking for a school that could hire me as a part time
tech and
gives lower fees for employees. I have only the tuning half of the
RPT test
to complete. Keep me in mind if that will fit a need at your College or
University.
Keith Roberts
keithspiano at gmail.com
> I'm happy to step away since this doesn't seem to be going anywhere
> > anyway. The issue of why certain sections of pianos go out of
tune more
> > than others I would think has some relevance for those
designing scales,
> > rescaling or otherwise trying to understand how and why their
pianos
> > will react to seasonal changes the way they do---perhaps not.
> >
> > David Love
>
> It does to me, but apparently very few others.
> Ron N
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