[pianotech] pianotech Digest, Vol 2, Issue 145

David Ilvedson ilvey at sbcglobal.net
Fri Dec 19 20:22:44 PST 2008


If you have been tuning aurally for years...successfully...you will have no problem with the tuning test...



David Ilvedson, RPT

Pacifica, CA 94044







Original message

From: "David Cuffel" 

To: 

Received: 12/19/2008 8:13:50 PM

Subject: Re: [pianotech] pianotech Digest, Vol 2, Issue 145





Hi,

 

That other person is Virgil Smith, an ardent aural piano tuner, who participated in tuning contests with Jim Coleman. 

 

I've been considering the purchase of an ETD to explore and maybe speed up my tuning.  I find that the concept that string tension is like a big balanced spring that changes with overall tension change helps me.  I may be overly fussy, but small changes like a beat and a half or two a second means that the piano will be in nominal tune but when I check the mid range against the bass or the top against the bass or mid range, I usually find that there is a slight settling.  It makes the difference between sparkling clarity when the piano's 'hatural' inharmonicity has been reconciled by its sympathetic resonance and what the piano's scale dictates to be the graduation of all the intervals that can be checked.  But, that makes me a slow tuner.  Would an EBT be useful in my case?  

 

I've come to respect well cone elctronically tuned pianos.  They have come a long way.  I started tuning in 1969, working with a perfvectionistic RPT, named Ed Sanders and have been an RPT myself.  I'll have to retest, but considering the standardization that has taken place since I first tested (1972 or 1973, I don't remember), it will be an adventure.

t

Dave Cuffel

Anchorage, Ak



From: pianotech-request at ptg.org

Subject: pianotech Digest, Vol 2, Issue 145

To: pianotech at ptg.org

Date: Fri, 19 Dec 2008 19:40:25 -0800







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--Forwarded Message Attachment--

From: davidlovepianos at comcast.net

To: pianotech at ptg.org

Date: Fri, 19 Dec 2008 19:35:41 -0800

Subject: Re: [pianotech] Tuning contest proposal













































It was Jim Coleman and 
(help me here folks) and I believe

the results were that there was no perceptible difference in quality of the

tuning.  How it was measured I don’t recall.  Nor do I recall

what type of piano was used.  





















David Love







www.davidlovepianos.com

































From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org

[mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Duaine & Laura

Hechler



Sent: Friday, December 19, 2008 7:28 PM



To: pianotech at ptg.org



Subject: Re: [pianotech] Tuning contest proposal



























So was Terry right - that "Experienced tuners could not

tell definitively which was aural and which was etd! "







David Love wrote: 







Been done.  















David Love







www.davidlovepianos.com











































Original message



From: "Duaine & Laura Hechler"  



To: pianotech at ptg.org



Received: 12/19/2008 6:58:06 PM



Subject: [pianotech] Tuning contest proposal







Since there are many and heated views of which tuning way is

better ....







I propose a tuning contest and final report.







Rules:



- Find an independent person or team to officiate



- Provide two identical piano and settings



- Two highly respected tuners that are proficient in there respective skills

(Aural and ETD)



- Tune each piano at A440 - Equal Temperament



- One tune aurally



- One tune with ETD



- Repeat (with the same tuners) for each Brand, Size and Style of piano







Results:



- Using an independent way to determine accuracy of the pitch of each note (all

88 notes) (Tuning forks / ETD in "test" mode" / etc)



- If ETD is used, the initial one for the tuning can not be used.



- Obviously, this rules out the tuning stability (how long the piano stays in

tune), hammer technique, etc. (All the human elements that can't be accurately

measured)







Extra idea:



- Repeat contest with each commercial ETD.







Eagerly waiting the results,



Duaine































































-- 

Duaine Hechler

Piano, Player Piano, Pump Organ

Tuning, Servicing & Rebuilding

Reed Organ Society Member

Florissant, MO 63034

(314) 838-5587

dahechler at charter.net

www.hechlerpianoandorgan.com

--

Home & Business user of Linux - 10 years















--Forwarded Message Attachment--

From: pcpoulson at sbcglobal.net

To: pianotech at ptg.org

Date: Fri, 19 Dec 2008 19:40:01 -0800

Subject: Re: [pianotech] Tuning contest proposal























My recollection is that Jim Coleman was one of the tuners, 

and used the ETD. I don't recall the other one. 





Patrick C. Poulson

Registered Piano Technician

Piano 

Technicians Guild









----- Original Message ----- 





From: 

pianolover 88 





To: pianotech at ptg.org 





Sent: Friday, December 19, 2008 7:06 

PM





Subject: Re: [pianotech] Tuning contest 

proposal









This "test" has been done! I can't remember exactly when or who 

was invloved, but I do know that they were both well know and respected 

tuners. The result? Experienced tuners could not tell definitively which was 

aural and which was etd! 



Terry Peterson

Accurate Piano 

Service

UniGeezer.com

"Going to the 

extreme...on just ONE wheel!" 

















Date: Fri, 19 Dec 2008 20:58:06 -0600

From: dahechler at charter.net

To: 

pianotech at ptg.org

Subject: [pianotech] Tuning contest proposal



Since 

there are many and heated views of which tuning way is better ....



I 

propose a tuning contest and final report.



Rules:

- Find an 

independent person or team to officiate

- Provide two identical piano and 

settings

- Two highly respected tuners that are proficient in there 

respective skills (Aural and ETD)

- Tune each piano at A440 - Equal 

Temperament

- One tune aurally

- One tune with ETD

- Repeat (with the 

same tuners) for each Brand, Size and Style of piano



Results:

- 

Using an independent way to determine accuracy of the pitch of each note 

(all 88 notes) (Tuning forks / ETD in "test" mode" / etc)

- If ETD is 

used, the initial one for the tuning can not be used.

- Obviously, this 

rules out the tuning stability (how long the piano stays in tune), hammer 

technique, etc. (All the human elements that can't be accurately 

measured)



Extra idea:

- Repeat contest with each commercial 

ETD.



Eagerly waiting the results,

Duaine















Send e-mail anywhere. No map, no compass. Get your Hotmail® account now. 







--Forwarded Message Attachment--

From: ilvey at sbcglobal.net

To: pianotech at ptg.org

Date: Fri, 19 Dec 2008 19:40:19 -0800

Subject: Re: [pianotech] Tuning contest proposal

























Jim Coleman did this kind of thing with his piano tuned to some sort of temperment other thanET...I believe most didn't hear it...Bill Bremmers quasi-Victorian temperment won another contest...BUT that isn't the point...PTG and its members paid for the conventions that had contests...a slight part of the overall convention...











David Ilvedson, RPT

Pacifica, CA 94044













Original message

From: "Duaine & Laura Hechler" 

 

To: pianotech at ptg.org

Received: 12/19/2008 7:27:46 PM

Subject: Re: [pianotech] Tuning contest proposal







So was Terry right - that "Experienced tuners could not tell definitively which was aural and which was etd! "



David Love wrote: 

















Been done.  











David Love





www.davidlovepianos.com































Original message

From: "Duaine & Laura Hechler"  

To: pianotech at ptg.org

Received: 12/19/2008 6:58:06 PM

Subject: [pianotech] Tuning contest proposal





Since there are many and heated views of which tuning way is better ....



I propose a tuning contest and final report.



Rules:

- Find an independent person or team to officiate

- Provide two identical piano and settings

- Two highly respected tuners that are proficient in there respective skills (Aural and ETD)

- Tune each piano at A440 - Equal Temperament

- One tune aurally

- One tune with ETD

- Repeat (with the same tuners) for each Brand, Size and Style of piano



Results:

- Using an independent way to determine accuracy of the pitch of each note (all 88 notes) (Tuning forks / ETD in "test" mode" / etc)

- If ETD is used, the initial one for the tuning can not be used.

- Obviously, this rules out the tuning stability (how long the piano stays in tune), hammer technique, etc. (All the human elements that can't be accurately measured)



Extra idea:

- Repeat contest with each commercial ETD.



Eagerly waiting the results,

Duaine





























-- Duaine HechlerPiano, Player Piano, Pump OrganTuning, Servicing & RebuildingReed Organ Society MemberFlorissant, MO 63034(314) 838-5587dahechler at charter.netwww.hechlerpianoandorgan.com--Home & Business user of Linux - 10 years















Life on your PC is safer, easier, and more enjoyable with Windows Vista®. See how 
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