[CAUT] Lanolin

Paul T Williams pwilliams4 at unlnotes.unl.edu
Mon Sep 20 10:58:36 MDT 2010


Alan,

This may be a silly question; but where would I buy lanolin in the correct 
form we need? Never done it, but I'm interested in trying this on some of 
our really hard hammers in practice rooms.

Thanks,
Paul



From:
"McCoy, Alan" <amccoy at ewu.edu>
To:
CAUTlist <caut at ptg.org>
Date:
09/20/2010 11:47 AM
Subject:
Re: [CAUT] Lanolin



Avery,

Because the vehicle in the case of lanolin is lacquer thinner, there is no 
cupping, and there is no bleed through. I applied it directly into the 
crown and let it soak in to the tip of the molding. I think this is 
appropriate for really dense, difficult-to-needle hammers. I won’t do this 
again for hammers that are brassy at the moment but needle-able. I just 
checked a set from last week and it is too dark now. I’ll need to reshape 
that set for more definition.

It’ll take some experimentation to learn when and how and how much to 
apply. But so far I think the stuff is worth trying and cheap.

Alan


From: Avery Todd <ptuner1 at gmail.com>
Reply-To: CAUTlist <caut at ptg.org>
Date: Thu, 16 Sep 2010 03:29:56 -0700
To: CAUTlist <caut at ptg.org>
Subject: Re: [CAUT] Lanolin

Brent and Alan, 

I'd be interested in knowing how much you apply. Just over the crown 
portion, let it soak in deeper, or more or less saturate the hammer. I 
have a particular piano in mind and am interested in trying this. Thanks. 

Avery Todd
Houston, TX

On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 5:31 PM, Brent Fischer <brent.fischer at yahoo.com> 
wrote:
Alan,  interested in knowing if the hammers cup or otherwisebleed color 
from the underfelt.  Funny to see this post today since
I tried for the first time "Hammer Softener " from Pianotek on 
C3 hammers. It doesn't bleed, cup, or smell much and had 
immediate results and best of all, no carpel tunnel from needling.
Proprietary is the word from Jane so the sauce is secret.
Brent

--- On Wed, 9/15/10, McCoy, Alan <amccoy at ewu.edu> wrote:

From: McCoy, Alan <amccoy at ewu.edu>
Subject: [CAUT] Lanolin
To: "CAUTlist" <caut at ptg.org>
Date: Wednesday, September 15, 2010, 12:19 PM


 Hi Folks,

I have tried some lanolin/lacquer thinner on several sets of hammers here 
per Fred’s post a couple weeks ago. BTW a good source of it is here for 
those who want to give it a try: 
http://www.thesage.com/catalog/FixedOil.html#Lanolin. $10 for 16 oz.

I applied it to two sets of hammers that were annoying to needle – grabby 
or just plain impenetrable (one set of Renner blues, and one NY Steinway). 
Also applied some just yesterday to a set that were in need of needling, 
but a decent set, i.e. not argumentative hammers (NY S&S). The first thing 
I noticed in all three cases was that the mixture itself has an effect on 
the voice (to say nothing about whether or not the needles penetrate more 
easily, the original reason for the application). To my ear it is a 
pleasant change to the tone – mellower and rounder. On the set yesterday 
it probably is too dark and I’ll need to file the hammers to get a bit 
more definition (they need filing anyway). The effect on the other two 
sets was not as pronounced, but still a pleasant change. I can’t think of 
any downside to using the mixture. Not yet anyway. 

I’d be interested in hearing if anyone else has used this stuff.

Alan

 

 




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