Basically, Duaine, yes that is what I am saying. I, in good concious, will not ask a customer to spend?money on a piano, unless I know, from experience that the piano will be a good, functioning instrument that will last another 50 or so years. What you do is your business, but?these are my ethics. Wim -----Original Message----- From: Duaine & Laura Hechler <dahechler at att.net> To: pianotech at ptg.org Sent: Fri, 10 Apr 2009 10:13 am Subject: Re: [pianotech] Commercial value vs. sentimental value So based on your logic, if the two pianos have the exact same things wrong with them ... and ... the customer knows the expectations of the outcome, then are you saying that the low end piano should not be fixed and you will not fix it ? wimblees at aol.com wrote: Chuck <snip> It is our?job as professionals to know which?pianos are worth restoring, and which are not. ? Willem (Wim) Blees, RPT Piano Tuner/Technician Mililani, Oahu, HI 808-349-2943 Author of: The Business of Piano Tuning available from Potter Press www.pianotuning.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://ptg.org/pipermail/pianotech_ptg.org/attachments/20090410/967e0953/attachment.html>
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