close enough>??

Richard Raskob raskobrg@spinn.net
Fri, 24 Jan 2003 18:33:57 -0700


Hello Conrad

	I find the middle note(s) on the treble bridge. A quick method to find the
middle note(s) is to find the note(s) 1/2 way between middle C and the 1st
note on the treble bridge and then jump up two octaves. I have found that
this part of the soundboard on will give you a good idea of the overall
pitch of the piano.  If the average pitch of these notes is greater than 2¢
off my FAC or stored tuning for that piano I do at least a two pass tuning.
I start charging extra if the piano is greater than 5¢ off.  This technique
is quick and a much more realistic just measuring A4.


yours

Richard Raskob RPT
Albuquerque NM

-----Original Message-----
From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org]On
Behalf Of Conrad Hoffsommer
Sent: Friday, January 24, 2003 8:03 AM
To: pianotech@ptg.org
Subject: Re: close enough>??


Friends,

I've been lurking on this discussion, and been having my curiosity piqued.
A collateral question formed in my alleged brain.


I know about pitch raises, I just finished one. (Details below)
I know from previous threads that some tuners charge a per cent surcharge
for pitch raises - some beginning at 2¢.


The piano which I just tuned (1971 Yamaha P2E) had (according to RCT) a
pitch of 440.4Hz @ A4. This is just less than 2¢. So, according to the
above criterium, it should be a standard tuning.  Right?

HA! Wrong...  Maybe if it were the Hamburg D which I tune every week.

IT NEEDED A PITCH RAISE.

The bass section was 8-23¢ flat, the first two plain unisons were -23¢ and
-40¢ with the pitch getting to within 4¢ by about F4 and staying there
until above the treble break where it went to a fairly constant -15/20¢.

How you gonna charge for this? Average the cents deviation? Pick a note at
random? Use a dartboard?

Do you have to wait until you are done and _then_ show the customer the
record of overpulls?

Big pitch raises on those once-a-decade tunings are no-brainers.


Where and (more importantly) _how_ do you draw the line?

Conrad


Conrad Hoffsommer - Music Technician
Luther College, 700 College Dr., Decorah, Iowa 52101-1045
Vox-(563)-387-1204 // Fax (563)-387-1076(Dept.office)

- People never grow up, they just learn how to act in public. -Bryan White


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