Custom Piano Restoration

Erwinspiano at aol.com Erwinspiano at aol.com
Sat Dec 9 23:43:54 MST 2006


 
RIc
  Ah.. ha. Now your talking my language.  Now  you've finally gotten around 
to the message that  David Andersen &  I have been verbalizing & pumping for 
quite some time  now. All My belly head colleagues on list & in the gallery 
clearly  understand & promote the value added piano that custom  
restoration/design produces. 
   IMHO C. R. equals unparrelled sound, touch &  beauty.  Professional 
pianist & ameteurs alike are weary of the mass  produced sound & touch & the 
marketing schpeel that goes with it.   Their ears are aching for a highly refined 
piano that lights up their soul, And  the attendees at Rochester made this 
abundantly clear ....they are ready for  something new & can hear the difference. 
   One frustration/risk has been that when we speak  enthusiastically of our 
own pianos or speak of a subjective  tonal  experiences we run the risk of 
appearing to be some kind of prima donnas or some  one selling the emperors new 
clothes so we/many have been careful as to how much  we can say. Truth is we 
are very excited about the sound we are hearing  & Love hearing piano music 
played on instruments  that a pianist has tonal Carte Blanche.
  Up to now it's a hard sell though because it's an uphill  battle against 
all the marketing & misinformation put out by dealers.   Some folks get it & 
others don't. Some folks hear & feel the difference  & understand that the 
perception of Custom restoration is REAL!  However as networking thru our members 
gets the word  out more folks are hitting our web sites with requests for 
information &  piano for sale.  More techs are calling us for belly work.  It's  
gratifying but we have a long way to go to change perception & frankly the  best 
way to do it is to have events like the Rebuilders Gallery where we can put  
our hands & ears on the real deal & experience a brand new flavor &  nuance. 
Hearing is not believing it's knowing
  Ain't it great!!
  Dale Erwin

Hi  Dale

All other perceptions and issues aside.... what you describe below  is 
actually my big hope for the industry at large.  It has seemed  apparent 
to me for a long time that the potential for the <<one man  shop>> to 
make the absolute best instruments around is a moment just  waiting for 
its time.  I'm actually amazed that mass production in  its many forms 
ends up doing as well as it does.  But the potential  for quality that 
lies in the <<one man shop>> really can  outstrip any factory IMHO.  Its 
just a concept waiting for its time  in this industry I think.  Let the 
mass production pianos be for the  masses.... and let the serious 
pianists of the world finally wake up to  the fact that music is not 
about predictability... especially since that  is largely an illusion to 
begin with.... and open up for a world of  tonality and quality that 
could exist if they would just start looking  more seriously at 
individual piano makers (persons) for their instruments  instead of known 
name  manufacturers.

Cheers
RicB


Ric
In my practice when someone orders a An RC  board  the ones I
make will
transfer much of the  load bearing  capacity to  the ribbing. Be
aware  that  in
my RC boards the ribs are made taller   & of stiffer materials with
tight radii
The compression componenet will  vary between 5 to 5.5% mc at  time
of pressing
depending on what type of  climate  the piano is going to. 
Nevada/Arizona
etc. gets the lower  MC & the bay  area gets 6% or higher. In either
case, because
of  prevailing MC in the mentioned climate, the panel  compression
will end up
being  roughly  similar at there final destinations. Customization is
great.
If I  had to ascribe a percentage of crown  support from this type of
board I'd
just  be  guessing at 20 to 30% as opposed to a purelly C.C. design.
All boards must benefit from the interface..hey it's a   form of
plywood.
Beyond that it's many  variable dynamic stresses in the panel  that
make  it
work....or not.
Dale

A RC  board can be said to have curved ribs... but  beyond that
it can
either  rely largely on panel compression and the stress
interface this
creates  with the ribs, or it can be a pure RC and S board.   All
depends
on  how much compression the whole assembly process ends up
putting into
the   board.

Cheers
RicB


 
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/20061210/fcf2926c/attachment.html 


More information about the Pianotech mailing list

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