You wouldn't need to touch either end of the tuning pin, either side would do. David Love davidlovepianos at comcast.net www.davidlovepianos.com -----Original Message----- From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Michael Magness Sent: Sunday, January 13, 2008 7:18 AM To: Pianotech List Subject: Re: tight pins On Jan 13, 2008 2:42 AM, Diane Hofstetter <dianepianotuner at msn.com> wrote: Sid Stone once held a technical session at his shop in which he applied heat to each tuning pin via a soldering iron. His theory was to heat the pin, thereby causing it to expand somewhat and cause the hole to get larger. I don't remember what his conclusions were (actually don't think there were definitive results). It always seemed to me that it would 1. take forever, and 2. since the soldering iron would probably take a long time to heat each pin for 230 pins, it would take forever, and 3. since metal doesn't expand as much as wood, it would take forever. I remember once trying to heat pins wholesale with an iron to achieve the same ends more quickly, but don't remember any positive results from doing so......... Maybe heat would work? Maybe the piano should be put first in too humid a condition, causing the wood to swell, then in too dry a condition, causing the wood to shrink? Actually, you might try some steam in a small section, then the blow dryer on hot? Also seems like it would take forever.... Protek? Please Vince, some advice from experience? Diane Leslie Bartlett l-bartlett at sbcglobal.net <http://sbcglobal.net/> Sat Jan 12 21:53:04 MST 2008 * Previous message: tight pins * Next message: bridge recapping tools * Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] ________________________________ I actually had the music director try to pull a couple "up" a bit, and he was quite shocked. I often have customers turn pins, both to try to get something in tune, and to understand that this is actually an athletic venture at times. les bartlett Diane Hofstetter David Love's idea of putting some current through the pins might work. The system he's referring to was a large tweezers, seperated at the apex and each side was insulated from the other with a small piece of fibreboard then they were bolted together using a nylon bolt and nut. The current was derived from a DC power converter(doorbell condenser)with the wire with the positive current to one arm of the tweezers and the wire from the negative to the other arm. The doorbell condenser is made to be "hardwired" to household current but an AC plug can be attached and it can be plugged in. Whenever the tips of the tweezers touched the ends of a center pin, simultaneously, the circuit was completed, the power flowed and the pin was heated momentarily. Not impossible in a grand piano pinblock just not that easy! <g> Mike -- I AM, therefore I THINK! Michael Magness Magness Piano Service 608-786-4404 www.IFixPianos.com email mike at ifixpianos.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/20080113/8957093b/attachment.html
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