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Schaff carries a tool specifically for that job.<br>
gary<br>
<br>
<br>
On 2/27/2012 10:37 AM, pianolover 88 wrote:
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Client with an old Whitney Kimball spinet with those square
rubber grommets that pop into the forked end of the keys. As
soon as I played the piano I noticed that the keys made a
clicking sound, and knew that it was caused from the grommets
having become hard and "fused" to the forks. I happened to have
a couple new ones with me, and explained what needed to be done.
As I proceeded to pop one off, it shattered to pieces. I
replaced it with a new one and the clicking was gone. So I'll be
replacing the whole set. Luckily, the elbows are wood and not
that old, yellowing and brittle plastic! <br>
<br>
So my question is, what would be the fastest most efficient way
to remove and install the new grommets? I'm thinking a socket
that fits that little square nut, which by the way, the old ones
remain on the sticker wire after the old hard rubber breaks
apart, and is almost rusted in place, making it hard to get off!
So, once all the old grommets and nuts are removed, and the
wires cleaned and lubed, would it easiest just to twist all the
new ones on my hand, or use a screwdriver socket?<br>
<br>
Cheers,<br>
<br>
Terry "UniGeezer" Peterson<br>
"Over 50, and not '2' Tired!" <br>
<a moz-do-not-send="true" style="font-weight:bold"
href="http://unigeezer.com/" target="_blank">www.unigeezer.com</a><br>
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