A metallic sound from bridge pin/string?

piannaman at aol.com piannaman at aol.com
Fri Sep 29 10:27:15 MDT 2006


Thanks for the good responses.  
 
Roger, I used a dowel to tap in the pin.  Perhaps it wasn't severe enough.  I'll use something metal next time.
 
Joe, the broken needle is a good idea, but it is more of an afterring, with nothing evident in the attack.
 
David, cool story!  Isn't it frustrating when you see people spending thousands of dollars on things we as piano techs consider inconsequential, yet they seem to be content with low grade pianos.  Not content, maybe, but tolerant?
 
 
 
Dave Stahl




Dave Stahl Piano Service
650-224-3560
dstahlpiano at sbcglobal.net
http://dstahlpiano.net/



 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: david at davidandersenpianos.com
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Sent: Fri, 29 Sep 2006 8:28 AM
Subject: Re: A metallic sound from bridge pin/string?


On Sep 29, 2006, at 6:37 AM, piannaman at aol.com wrote: 
 
> 
> D#4, however, has a metallic after ring that I couldn't dispose of > for any length of time. I was able to make it go away for brief > periods by seating the string at the front bridge pin (pushing > down, not whacking!). After about ten hammer blows, the sound > would return. It seems that the string wants to return to the > position from whence it came, the spot of the annoying noise. I > tried to lightly tap the pin with a dowel, but to no avail. 
 
Hey, Dave, I had the same thing yesterday; a 40-year-old Rudolph Wurlitzer console in a 5 million dollar house on the beach in Malibu. With the client, a sweet lady who is a professional singer (a cantor) whose husband is a movie director, I took the bottom board off, put a screwdriver with pressure against the back bridge pin: noise is down half; put the pressure on the front bridge pin: noise goes away. 
 
I told her what we needed to do---bring a tilter, take the action out, CA the bridge pins, yada yada....and then I said 
"what you really need, my dear, is a better piano; you're a professional; you want to record in here; you have accompanists coming in all the time---it's time to treat yourself with the respect you deserve." 
 
She looked at me sheepishly and said "You're right, I know---but I've had this ever since my Mom paid $15 a month for it in the '60's---it's a familiar old thing." 
 
I said "I know, I know....but the reality is it was a C- piano to start with." 
 
She looked at me, with a slow smile, and said, "OK. A nice little shiny black one, that feels nice and sounds nice and bright." 
 
I said "Yup, a small Yamaha or Kawai studio upright would be perfect." 
 
She said, "OK, let's do it; Oh, thank you, David---" all lit up now.... 
 
So I just need to find the right pianner, and we'll all be happy..... 
 
P.S. the dogs were nice, too. 
 
Nothing's new under the sun, my friends.....it's the human contact that is the payoff in this business. 
 
Peace. 
 
David Andersen 
 
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