Rob, If the artist baulks at propping the back of the piano on a saw horse then will another back leg from another S&S fit in the lock even if the wheels don't match? If this happened (crunched tenon from lateral strain), they need the piano on a truck, not just some big, clunky wheels. Fashion a plywood box to place the back of the piano on, paint it black, call it a resonance chamber. Kewl Look on the bright side . . . Jon Page At 04:46 PM 11/30/1999 -0600, you wrote: >Howdy, > >I have had a not so fun afternoon. When I reported to the >performing arts center this morning I was told that the tail leg >on the Steinway had busted off. I quickly ran down to check. >Sure enough there it was, sadly slumped over like a drunk piano >player. The remains was laying on the floor, broken clean >through the dowel at the base. Of course the bad news couldn't >end there. That piano is needed for a concerto competition on >Thursday. > >Perhaps it could be fixed if enough shop effort was put into it >but at his particular moment I don't have that kind of time. I >got on the phone today to see if I could get Steinway to send a >new leg via Fed-Ex. No dice, it would take weeks. Under the >circumstances for now it looks like we are going to temporarily >move a piano in from another location. > >These legs have extra large wheels somewhat like a Hamburg. >Never previously needing to know or care I was under the >impression that someone simply put the larger wheels on the >original legs. Upon closer inspection, however, I see now that >these legs are in fact different then a normal Steinway leg. >This would of course make sense because the larger diameter wheel >would otherwise raise the piano too high. Cutting down a normal >Steinway leg would look strange to say the least. Although the >face plate portion seems normal the actual legs are shorter. >Clearly these legs are specifically designed for large wheels. >Thus now I'm attempting to determine the origin of these legs. >Does Steinway sell Hamburg legs in lacquer finish for New York >pianos? > >Rob Goodale, RPT > Jon Page, Harwich Port, Cape Cod, Mass. mailto:jpage@capecod.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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