---------------------- multipart/alternative attachment One should keep in perspective what elevated heat means, look at the wattage. It is a simple matter of physics that warmer air can hold more water. When you make that environment under the piano warmer than the surrounding air you dry it out. The concern would be more about adding heat to an environment you want cooled (your front room/etc.). Still, I think the longevity of the piano should win out. I've seen too much humidity cycling damage in older pianos in the western states I've worked in to give much weight to comfort considerations. Andrew At 05:11 AM 6/21/2004 -0400, you wrote: >At 06:06 AM 6/20/2004 -0400, Terry Farrell wrote: >>I own a Boston GP-178, which is located in my home. I have about five rods >>on it totaling about 190 Watts. The unit runs 80% of the time during periods >>of high humidity. I do not have a bottom cover nor a string cover. The >>tunings/pitch are steady as a rock. > >So, does this mean that, as long as the humidity remains at or above the >humidistat setting, elevated heat in proximity to the soundboard is not a >concern? > >Also, since I have forgotten my technician password for the DC website, >what is the intended purpose of the cover? Is it to prevent heat or >humidity loss (upward) or eliminate air exchange (bottom)? Is there any >concern about mold or mildew conditions in such a contained environment? > >David Skolnik > > >_______________________________________________ >pianotech list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives ---------------------- multipart/alternative attachment An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/09/dc/a6/ff/attachment.htm ---------------------- multipart/alternative attachment--
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