[pianotech] Broken plate

Allan allan at sutton.net
Thu Apr 16 19:57:38 PDT 2009


I did check everything I could before starting to tune. No sign of anything
wrong, no separation of the pinblock, tuning went perfectly normal. The
piano had been in her mother's basement since my client was 5. Now it was
(it is?) in her own basement with the wood stove 6 feet away. Had not been
tuned for 20 years.

 

Do old strings get dry? Does cast iron get tired? Do glass in a stain glass
window ooze down, each piece getting thicker at the bottom with time?

 

Allan Sutton

www.pianotechniquemontreal.com

  _____  

From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of Fenton Murray
Sent: 16 avril 2009 12:03
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [pianotech] Broken plate

 

I've had this happen once on an old upright, again with a 1/2 step pitch
raise. The client called the next day said the piano was way out of tune. \

On my call back the top couple octave were way flat and I found the fresh
break in the strut.

The clients said they had heard a terrible crack in the middle of the night.

One time in thousands of tunings, but it happens.

Fenton

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

From: John Ross <mailto:jrpiano at win.eastlink.ca>  

To: pianotech at ptg.org 

Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 12:18 AM

Subject: Re: [pianotech] Broken plate

 

Looking back, could you tell us any indicators, that you might have noticed,
to indicate this problem.

It happened to me, back in the 70's.

I was able to pass indicators on to other techs, who said it saved them from
a similar situation.

Any time I notice a piano being a way down in pitch, I will do the
following, to check for pinblock separation.

Check the rear of the lid, and make sure that the joints on the wood are
lined up, and tight.

Check the top of the plates relationship to the top cover of wood, and make
sure the relationship is even.

Sometimes it necessitates the removal of the top cover, to confirm a
separation, of the pinblock. The rear of the lid may have to be pried off,
and sometimes there are screws below the rubber buttons.

If there is a separation, I use 8" C clamps and close the gap, sometimes if
the pitch were low enough, you do not even have to lower the pitch.

I then remove the bolts/screws, one by one and drill a hole through the
plate to the back, and insert a carriage bolt, head to the back. It imbeds
itself in the wood, and looks neat from the rear.

You could cut the bolts and use acorn nuts, to make the inside look good. 

I used to use 1/2" bolts, but others on the list have indicated that 3/8" is
adequate.

You could use glue or epoxy in the joint.

Now, on a Willis La Ronde, the top of the pinblock is visible, was there no
separation?

If there was no separation, then I don't know, what could have caused the
mishap.

So a check, it could save you from a disaster.

You were very lucky you had an understanding customer,

some customers are not so understanding.

John Ross

Windsor, Nova Scotia.

 

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

From: Ryan Sowers <mailto:tunerryan at gmail.com>  

To: pianotech at ptg.org 

Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 12:43 AM

Subject: Re: [pianotech] Broken plate

 

Whew! Fortunately the client sounds extraordinarily understanding. Thank
goodness for clients like that!! God bless 'em. 

It hasn't happened to me yet, although I've heard the stories from some of
the old timers. Sometimes they can break a while AFTER the tuning. 

I guess there's a reason we don't usually hear about Willis La Ronde pianos!


We feel your pain.

Hopefully you got the one broken plate of your career out of the way!

On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 8:07 PM, Allan <allan at sutton.net> wrote:

It happened to me today,

This sound I will never forget.

This was a very small piano, built in the 60's (Willis La Ronde)

The lady stayed throughout most of the pitchraise (almost one semitone)
telling me the stories of her childhood as child musician, very touching
stories indeed that made the break so much more dramatic.

I was done! 3 top notes left on this second pass. One string had broken
earlier.

We did not "really" cry. I sat on the floor for 10 minutes as she found
positive angles to this happening. She will get a new, better piano.... we
will not have to replace the broken string... some detachment must be in
order...

Allan Sutton
www.pianotechniquemontreal.com








-- 
Ryan Sowers, RPT
Puget Sound Chapter
Olympia, WA
www.pianova.net

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