Killer Octave - Warranty Issue?

jolly roger baldyam@sk.sympatico.ca
Fri, 07 Sep 2001 20:40:46 -0500


Hi Terry,
             The first thing to do is measure for crown and bearing, if
there is none, then imform the customer and advise them to go back to the
dealer.
Did you try seating strings and, checking the bridge pins?  Many of the
Samick products have bridge pin problems right out of the case.
Roger 



At 06:57 PM 9/7/01 -0400, you wrote:
>Tuned a real beauty this afternoon - 3 year old Kohler & Campbell 4' 6"
>grand (or....not so grand as the case may be). I had to take a double-take
>at the thing when I first walked in the house - I thought it might be one of
>those 2-foot deep fake-grand digital pianos. But NO, I opened the lid and
>low and behold, there were a couple hundred strings in there.
>
>I pointed out the prominent false beats in the top two octaves to the owner.
>He agreed that was a problem, and plans to contact the dealer regarding a
>warranty fix.
>
>Running up and down the keyboard, this piano has a VERY prominent killer
>octave area. It is about an octave in size and is centered in the treble
>section (second from the top out of four sections). Volume just drops way,
>way down. One of the worst examples of a killer octave area that I have
>heard. It is really, really prominent. Plucking strings indicates the same
>prominent killer octave area.
>
>I have not tried voicing or anything else. But I strongly suspect that there
>is nothing that has caused just the dozen or so hammers in that area to go
>mush. I strongly suspect this is a soundboard/bridge problem.
>
>The owner is a intermediate piano player at best. He has not said anything
>about it to me. This killer octave thing to me is real, but its cause is a
>bit fuzzy, because I have never fixed one. What is the consensus here -
>should I point it out to the owner and suggest he may want to initiate a
>warranty claim (let 'em voice it six times and replace strings, etc. before
>you insist on a new soundboard/piano)? It seems extreme to me, but with what
>I know now about pianos, and if I had bought the piano, I sure as $#%& would
>want it fixed! I know it is a junk piano, but it should at least start out
>consistent across the whole keyboard. The tenor/bass break is OK tone-wise -
>I would not expect more - it is on a par with other junk like this - maybe
>even near the top of the heap! - but a whole dead octave seems way less than
>par to me. Is this elusive killer octave a warranty issue?
>
>Waddaya think?
>
>Terry Farrell
> 



This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC