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<DIV>I have done this a number of times on old uprights and crummy little
spinets, etc. However, I simply spray one surface with accelerator and apply
thick CA glue to the other surface and hold with fingers for maybe ten seconds
and move on to the next one. That way I can do the 200-cent pitch raise and
tuning right away at the same appointment. No need to wait for glue to dry or to
have the piano owner removing clothes pins!</DIV>
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<DIV>Terry Farrell</DIV>
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<DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial">----- Original Message ----- </DIV>
<DIV> Regluing unravelling
hammer felts, I use clamp clothes pins to hold the felt on while the glue
dries. Also, I always carry about 15 of them in my tool kit. When I
do this on a customer's old piano (the key word here is
<EM>old,</EM> (or spinet) as I don't think I would reglue unravelling hammer
felt on an expensive high end piano via clothes pins), I dont have time
to watch the glue dry. I just instruct the customer to gently remove
the clothes pins the next day and they can keep the pins
for keeping music books open or something. I deduct the clothes pins as a
business supply.</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Julia</DIV>
<DIV>Reading PA </DIV></BLOCKQUOTE></BODY></HTML>