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I got a 7' Hardman grand from an estate sale. The tuner who was =
rebuilding it died. It had no strings, was refinished etc., but poorly. =
I have it on consignment and haven't yet sold it. =20
Here are some of the things I've heard about hardman:
The book "Pianos and their makers" speaks highly of Hardmans around the =
turn of the century .
It was at one time the official piano of the metropolitan opera.
It was advertised as the most expensive piano in the world.
FDR had one in the white house.
I can't verify those statement, but I think it compares as almost as =
good as the S&S "B".
Too bad I can't get a decent price for it like you can for a B.
Carl Meyer=20
----- Original Message -----=20
From: Dave Nereson=20
To: pianotech@ptg.org=20
Sent: Saturday, December 16, 2000 2:47 AM
Subject: Hardman pianos
(For- What- It's- Worth Dept.):
I tune a 1916 Hardman 5'2" grand which I think used to be =
great-sounding but now, for various reasons, is just "OK". But I have a =
1904 Hardman, Peck upright in my living room which has more guts in the =
bass and better sustain than many a small grand. The case is also =
beautiful with an inlaid Greek key pattern across the top and around the =
keybed and inlaid wood "torches" with mother-of-pearl handles and flames =
on the front panel. It also has a cast iron frame under the keybed, =
making it quite heavy. =20
The action is a Wessell, Nickel, & Gross, with wippens that have =
lost motion compensators for the soft pedal. W, N, & G really made some =
nice actions in their heyday, but I've seen some from later decades that =
were a disgrace to the once-famous name. Maybe this was after Aeolian =
bought the Hardman name -- did they also control the W, N, & G name? =
According to a book I read about pianos -- I forget which one -- actions =
made by Wessell, Nickel, & Gross (three former Steinway employees who =
went into the action manufacturing biz), became quite well known. But =
of course the general public didn't always remember the exact names and =
some salesmen of the time would try to sell a piano by touting its =
"wood, nickel, & brass" action. No kidding.
Hardman, Peck also made mini-uprights with different names on the =
fallboard. Mine says 'Hensel', with Hardman, Peck & Co. underneath. =
It's a cute 42" upright, not console, with 73 keys, and sounds as good =
as most spinets or drop-action consoles I've tuned. Great gig piano -- =
I can roll it up a ramp into my truck all by my lonesome. --Dave =
Nereson
----- Original Message -----=20
From: kam544@flash.net=20
To: pianotech@ptg.org=20
Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2000 9:50 PM
Subject: Re: A terrible piano
>...I would have sworn
>I was tuning a 75 year old Hardman upright...
>Patrick Greene
Hey, watch how you throw that name around there, pardner... :)
I picked up a 1909 Hardman grand (about 5' 8") about a week ago that =
looked
like the pits for all practical purposes, has multiple cracks in the
soundboard, definite bearing problems in places, action regulation =
highly
irregular, pedal lyre loose as a goose, action shifts to the left, =
chipped
keytops, tuning pin solution stains abound, about every reason on =
earth to
trash the thing, or do a complete rebuild ... but with a name like =
Hardman?
For the fun of it, I installed some used Tokiwa shanks and Abel =
hammers
that were removed from a Steinway D. Did some rough regulation ... =
very
rough ... and man, does it put out like no piano I've ever met ... =
just
unbelievable.
It defies all known piano technology I've learned. Just blows me =
away the
magic sensation it gives when I play it. I'm going to do as little =
as
possible to not lose that mystique.
So watch how you throw that name around there, pardner... :)
Keith McGavern
Registered Piano Technician
Oklahoma Chapter 731
Piano Technicians Guild
USA
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