Indeed Philippe,
That is what I would do : install a dampp-chaser to get rid of the humidity swings that no piano likes, and when changing for another, keep the dampp-chaser for the new one.
Btw, are you enjoying the coldest month of August ever, after the hottest month of July ever ?
Best regards.
Stéphane Collin.
----- Original Message -----
From: Philippe Errembault
To: Pianotech List
Sent: Friday, August 18, 2006 12:57 AM
Subject: Re: Is it a good idea to tuned on itself a piano outtuned becuse ofhumidity
Well, because I use it !!!
but with the wooden frame, it moves quite much with humidity variations.
the point is the Damp-chaser is probably much more expensive than the value of the piano...
Now, if I ever have to change the piano, maybe I could move the damp-chaser to the new one !?!
Philippe Errembault
----- Original Message -----
From: Stéphane Collin
To: Pianotech List
Sent: Thursday, August 17, 2006 2:37 PM
Subject: Re: Is it a good idea to tuned on itself a pianoouttunedbecuseofhumidity
Hi Philippe.
If the piano is not worth preserving it, why would you preserve it ?
Stéphane Collin.
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