Hi Tom, Does the damper follow the string when you push in on the strings? Is there a loose rib or foreign object on the bridge. Braiding on the waste ends of the bass or loose braiding? If the pitch is the same as the note played it will not be a note higher in the scale. Just some ideas, good hunting. Joe Goss RPT Mother Goose Tools imatunr at srvinet.com www.mothergoosetools.com ----- Original Message ----- From: Tom Sivak To: Pianotech List Sent: Friday, October 19, 2007 7:29 AM Subject: Re: ringing overtones It's possible that another string is actually ringing. Does it stop when you mute the string with your finger? If not, it might be a different string ringing in sympathy with the offending string. Tom Sivak Chicago Noah Haverkamp <noahhaverkamp at yahoo.com> wrote: There's a copper-wound tenor bichord (at the break) on a Kawai CL-4WO 44" console serial number 1821717 that rings high unpleasant overtones rather loudly, loud enough so you can hear it over the phone, as soon as the damper damps the strings. When I mute either string it still happens. I moved the damper head up and down, left and right and every which way and checked damper timing - nothing helped. It appeared to fit nice and neat into the gap of the bichord. It was seated firmly against the bridge and bridge pins. The strings are aligned at the v-bar. Is it possible I just didn't get the damper to seat just perfectly? After I left I thought of this possibility: maybe the damper felt is too tough. Perhaps replacing it with fresh? or a softer kind? The other notes just above rang just a little as well, but only half as bad. Or is it just the piano? Can nothing be done? -Noah Haverkamp Frere -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/20071019/ac301733/attachment.html
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