rim separations & beam cracks

PAULREVENKOJONES paulrevenkojones at aol.com
Sun Jan 14 13:17:25 MST 2007


Patrick, if you go to our website at http://www.motspheres.com/RestorationProcess/index.html, you'll see exactly what you would have had the rebuilder do, and what the repair would entail. This was (still is, I hope) a Bechstein with much the same problems you are describing.

PR-J

IF YOU WANT TO KNOW THE TRUTH, STOP HAVING OPINIONS!


In a message dated 01/13/07 15:19:47 Central Standard Time, jpdraine at gmail.com writes:
This morning I went out to tune a Steinway A, recently purchased 
several months ago at a major S&S dealership's "major concert venue 
special sales event". While originally manufactured in 1908, It had 
recently been fully rebuilt (new soundboard etc.). Anyway, I found a 
few hairline cracks in the lid as I was tuning it, and then as I was 
under the piano, starting to install a Dampp-Chaser system, I noticed 
a crack in one of the beams, and gaps/cracks in the rim. As I was just 
about to put some screws to secure the fill tube in the immediate 
vicinity of said cracks I decided to retreat from the installation, 
and inform the prevously blissful customer of my findings. 
I really don't know what level of implied or spelled out warranty the 
customer may have in this situation. It's certainly possible that 
these gaps & cracks will be/are stable, but I prefer to be cautious 
rather than blindly optimistic. The customer isn't a panicky type; 
she's on good terms with the sales person & I helped her compose an 
e-mail to the sales person informing the dealer of the situation. 
It seems to me an EZ but entirely stable repair would be for the 
dealer to take it back to the shop, flip the piano over, and fill the 
rim & beam cracks with low viscosity epoxy. I suppose a low viscosity 
glue can fix the cracks in the lid, too, followed by a couple more 
coats of ebony lacquer. 
Question to the rebuilder/remanufacturers/dealers out there: wouldn't 
you address these issues even if you're selling it as a used (at said 
concert & teaching complex) rebuilt piano? 
Put another way, am I being too "sensitive" in expecting some effort 
in filling the gaps in the rim in a structurally sound manner? 
Patrick Draine 
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