Surprisingly, no it did not look all that strange. It was very carefully cut and taped, so it lay flat and I think that the piano was a wood color anyway. It was a grand of some kind, as I recall. Surprised the daylights out of me, too!!!! Robin ----- Original Message ----- From: Avery To: Pianotech List Sent: Tuesday, September 12, 2006 5:38 PM Subject: Re: music rack tray But doesn't it look pretty bad? Compared to felt, etc.? Avery At 10:45 AM 9/12/2006, you wrote: Brian, I've used sixty grit sandpaper, neatly cut, and applied with doubled sided tape. Worked pretty well. Robin Blankenship ----- Original Message ----- From: Brian Doepke To: 'Pianotech List' Sent: Tuesday, September 12, 2006 8:05 AM Subject: music rack tray Hello List, There is a church piano, baby grand, that has very shallow grooves in the tray of the music rack. I imagine that the grooves are supposed to help keep the music from sliding off. These grooves are so shallow that they are almost useless. Besides cutting new grooves in the wood, what other options do you have so that the music rack can become more functional and music can stay on the piano? Thanks. Brian P. Doepke AAA Piano Works, Inc. Piano Tuning-Repair-Purchase Consults 260-432-2043 260-417-1298 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/20060912/d3854449/attachment.html
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