[pianotech] Best way to change touch on Yamaha Grand

William Truitt surfdog at metrocast.net
Tue Jan 5 18:10:50 MST 2010


Let me emphasize what Tom just said about regulation.  Your post did not
mention when her piano was last regulated, i. e. what is the present state
of regulation.  That's your starting point to establishing her needs.  All
the suggestions made thus far are good, and the cleaning and lubrication and
polishing suggested is part of regulation for many of us.

 

If her piano has not been regulated recently, begin there, and then proceed
to other options as needed.  You may well meet many of her needs simply by
doing good close regulation and reducing friction.  

 

Will Truitt

 

From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of Tom Driscoll
Sent: Tuesday, January 05, 2010 7:47 PM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [pianotech] Best way to change touch on Yamaha Grand

 

Martin,

 Ditto on Mr. Monroes post on friction.. I performed a day of service on a
same size kawai last week that played like a truck.I list in no particular
order and at the risk of leaving something out:  Lube and bed keyframe,

Lube keypins and ease keys at balance hole and bushings, Polish capstans and
lube , lube rep lever and jacks,knuckles ,wippen cushions and what ever else
you can find,reshape hammers  and REGULATE. 

Jacks too far under knuckles for example will make letoff very "resistant"

Sample work up one note with touch weight before and after and more
importantly let the client feel the difference.

 Dampers lifting too early with the key could be a problem also.

  Just a few ideas,

 Tom Driscoll

 

Subject: Re: [pianotech] Best way to change touch on Yamaha Grand

 

Hi Martin,

Probably a can of worms here, as there really isn't a "right" thing to do
without first considering a few things.  I think my first diagnostic would
be to assess the friction in the action, and eliminate as much as possible,
lubing keypins/bushings, repinning hammers to a low friction level, say
3-4g.  I'd also want to check knuckle condition and bolster/replace and lube
them as well.

My second diagnostic would be to find out how married your client is to the
current tone of the piano.  Lightening the hammers gets you great benefit
for little cost, but will also change the tone and projection/power of the
piano.  Presumably with a 5'3" piano we're not "real" concerned about
projection, but it's something to consider.  If the tone is weak, consider
filing/shaping hammers and possibly hardening them.  The resulting brighter
tone really can make the piano "easier" to play.  Having done this, one is
able to work less hard to achieve a particular dynamic level.

There are a number of more elaborate geometry solutions that may help,
including adjusting knuckle placement or capstan position among others.  I'd
also want to take a look at the leading and see if I couldn't remove a lead
from each key, thereby reducing inertia.  Often high inertia, low DW pianos
play harder than lower inertia, higher DW pianos.  Perhaps others will fill
in more here.  I wouldn't consider myself an "expert" on action geometry, I
just know enough to be dangerous.  ;-]

Hope this gives you a start.  I think it's really a lot of individual
assessment, though with the particular piano in question.

William R. Monroe



On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 5:37 PM, martin cipolla <pianodoctor at msn.com> wrote:

My client has developed arthrits and needs to have the action quite a bit
lighter on her
5` 3`` Yamaha Grand.  This is not something I have done before and would
appreciate any suggestions on how to lighten the touch for her.
Thanks,
Marty

 

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