List - At the risk of labeling myself as being hopelessly out-of-date, I'll throw in my 2 cents worth on the subject. For molded plastic keytops, I maintain that contact cement is a great alternative. If you know how to use it, it's quick, easy to apply, and really fool-proof. No clamping time to speak of - 30 seconds or so in a cork faced vise is all it takes, and the keytop is ready to file. (I file by hand with 2 files, by the way, so again, I'm behind the times, but what can I say. I enjoy the work.) I've been applying keytops this way for 30 years, and with every set have written up a guarantee against the keys popping off, and have not had to make good on that problem even once, since it never happens. As far as the appearance of the keytops I do, Mike (Morvan), you've seen them. How would you rate them? I'm sure you've seen all sorts of work come into your shop. On a scale of 1 - 10, with 10 being the work you do, and 1 being the kind of crappy work that we've all seen where the guy obviously didn't know what the hell he was doing, where would you rate my work? Anyway, I'm the first to say that contact cement is not for everyone. If you're not careful in using the stuff, it can be a mess. I chews up the surface of the keytop if you're sloppy and get it where it doesn't belong. The trick is to know how to apply the cement so it goes only where you want it to. This is all not to say that I believe there is anything wrong with using PCV-E glue, or Mike's European glue. If it works for you and you like it - by all means stick with it (if you'll pardon the pun). Well, I'll quit now. It's nearly New Year's Eve, the Cyclones won their bowl game (sorry you Gopher fans), and life is good. I may even crack open a can of Bud Light to ring in 2010. Wild times here on the frozen tundra we call Iowa, let me tell you. Have a great New Year, all. Chuck Behm -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://ptg.org/pipermail/pianotech.php/attachments/20091231/df16fb45/attachment.htm>
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