Thanks Arnold, Pierre _____ De : pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] De la part de Arnold Duin Envoyé : samedi 10 mai 2008 20:57 À : Pianotech List Objet : Re: Epoxy Bass Bridge Repair Hallo Pierre, HOLLAND , BELGIUM & LUXEMBOURG Epifanes/W.Heeren & Zoon B.V. Postbus 166, 1430 AD Aalsmeer. Tel: 31 297 360366, Fax: 31 297 342078 Email: info at epifanes.nl Web: http://www.epifanes.nl/ Arnold Duin ----- Original Message ----- From: Gevaert <mailto:pierre.gevaert at belgacom.net> Pierre To: 'Pianotech List' <mailto:pianotech at ptg.org> Sent: Saturday, May 10, 2008 6:24 PM Subject: RE: Epoxy Bass Bridge Repair Hi Gregor, Could you tell me where you can find West System Epoxy in Germany ? I live in Belgium. Thanks Pierre _____ De : pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] De la part de Gregor _ Envoyé : vendredi 9 mai 2008 17:49 À : Pianotech List Objet : RE: Epoxy Bass Bridge Repair Terry, what do you mean by "you need to leave some epoxy in the gap. You dont want to epoxy-starve the joint."? I found a source for Western System Epoxy handy repair set including that filler here in Germany. Good to know, I will try it perhaps one day, but not with that Kawai. I told the customer to ask a collegue who has 7 pianotechs working for his shop: 4 on master level, 2 with certificate of apprenticeship and one apprentice, and they have a huge workshop. I don´t do repairs with woodwork anymore, just tuning, small repairs and selling pianos. But in this case it probably would have been easier to order a new brigde from Kawai which fits perfectly without any adjusting: just installing and it fits. Gregor _____ From: mfarrel2 at tampabay.rr.com To: pianotech at ptg.org Subject: Re: Epoxy Bass Bridge Repair Date: Fri, 9 May 2008 08:57:04 -0400 Epoxy repairs for a situation as you describe can yield very good results. Sometimes the crack opens up a fair bit youll want to clamp it back into position not to clamp in the traditional sense, but rather to simply position the parts in their original orientation you need to leave some epoxy in the gap. You dont want to epoxy-starve the joint. I use West System epoxy resin, hardeners and fillers: www.westsystem.com My favorite for a cracked bridge is #404 High-Density Filler and using the West System two-step bonding procedure described on the West System web site. The following is from the West System web site: 404 High-Density Filler 404 High-Density filler is a thickening additive developed for maximum physical properties in hardware bonding where high-cyclic loads are anticipated. It can also be used for filleting and gap filling where maximum strength is necessary. Color: off-white. You can either push the bridge pins into the uncured epoxy, tidy up and be done with it, or, for a neater, more exacting job, you can epoxy the gap and then drill bridge pin holes after the epoxy hardens. I have found that if cosmetic considerations are not paramount, I apply the epoxy, clamp together until the wood is close to original dimension, clean off epoxy squeeze out (acetone) - at that point you will be able to see the outline of the original pin holes - push pins in place - the wood will have been drawn together enough to hold the pin in its original position - and then level off and clean up the little bit of epoxy that squeezes out of the holes as you push the pin in place. Wait a day or two for the epoxy to completely cure, go back and install bass strings. I've done this repair numerous times with great success. And of course, on a nicer piano where the budget allows, new bridge and/or new cap is preferred. Terry Farrell ----- Original Message ----- From: Gregor _ <mailto:karlkaputt at hotmail.com> To: pianotech at ptg.org Sent: Friday, May 09, 2008 5:13 AM Subject: Epoxy Bass Bridge Repair I crawled the archieves but I did not really find what I was looking for: does Epoxy work even for bigger gaps? I wanted to tune a Kawai CE-11 upright yesterday but the bass bridge looked horrible: a long gap which affected 9 notes. The gap started at the upper pin row and the pins were vertical. Some strings rattled at the pins. The gap expanded up to 4 mm above the upper pin row. I did not try but I could imagine that I could have pulled out some pins without using pliers. First at all: I never worked with Epoxy. My first thought was to pull out the pins, fill the gap with epoxy and drill new holes for new pins. Could that work or is such a gap too much for Epoxy? The bridge is made of one piece of wood, no cap. I was shocked about such a gap in a Kawai from 1992 (no grey market import): no floor heating, no air con and no heater near by the piano. And I don´t live in an area with huge differences in the climate. Very strange. That damage is a pitty because everything else in this piano was in a pretty good condition. But making a new bridge would be definitely too expensive including transports from the second floor into a workshop and back to the customer. Gregor _____ Get news, entertainment and everything you care about at Live.com. Check <http://www.live.com/getstarted.aspx%20> it out! _____ Invite your mail contacts to join your friends list with Windows Live Spaces. It's easy! Try it! <http://spaces.live.com/spacesapi.aspx?wx_action=create&wx_url=/friends.aspx &mkt=en-us> -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/20080515/b290e0b3/attachment.html
This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC