A few years ago one of my customers sends me to her elderly mother's apartment - -I think the woman may have been deceased --- to check out the piano and tell her how much it was worth. It turns out to be an old Jacob Doll baby grand, but the amazing thing about the piano was that ALMOST EVERY ONE OF THE BASS STRINGS HAD BROKEN AND HAD BEEN REPAIRED USING THE SPLICING METHOD (what other method is there?) There must have been about 40 "knots" visible between the bass tuning pins and the agraffes! What a sight! What a nightmare! After a pretty thorough inspection I told the woman to junk the piano. Well, a couple of years later, a new customer, in a different county, calls me for a tuning. I get there, take off the music desk, and the first thing I noticed while looking over the old bomb is that most of the bass strings had broken and were repaired! I said to myself, "oh no -- this piano looks familiar to me!" I asked the woman where she picked up this treasure (I didn't use those words), and she told me about an antique shop several miles away. It seems that the original owner's daughter sold it to the antique shop, and they in turn sold it to my new customer. Moral of the story: DON'T GO SHOPPING FOR PIANOS AT ANTIQUE SHOPS! Jesse Gitnik NYC Since 1980 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/20070205/9c92fc2b/attachment.html
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