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Hi Rogerio,
<P>There are several ways to do it.
<P>Changing the action geometry is one, which I do not want to comment
on, since I'm not that familiar with that. I'm sure there are others
here who could comment on that one. If the old parts and the new
parts were of different dimension, perhaps this is a place to start.
<P>Another way that can lighten the touch is by lightening the hammers.
I've not hung Renner hammers, so I'm not familiar with them in particular,
but I've seen some new replacement hammers from several sources that were
HUGE! And it doesn't take much to make a difference.
<P>Also, there are friction issues in a keyboard and an action which can
make an action feel heavy too.
<P>Good luck,
<P>Brian Trout
<BR>Quarryville, Pa.
<P>Rogerio Cunha wrote:
<BLOCKQUOTE TYPE=CITE> <FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE=-1>To the
list</FONT></FONT> We're repeatedly encountering key-balancing problems
when restoring
<BR>Steinway grand pianos made in Hamburg in the 40's and 50's.
<P>Right now we're finishing a German B model from 1957, which received
<BR>new Renner hammers (complete) and new repetitions. After all due
<BR>regulations and lubrications, the keys only start moving down, in
<BR>average, with a 70-gram mass on top of it.
<P>Considering there isn't much room for additional lead, and, according
to
<BR>our past experience, if you insist and lead the keys anyway to 47 grams
<BR>you end up with a reasonable weight, but with a strange touch (the
<BR>keyboard gets lazy, like you're playing a "rubber action"), so we're
<BR>wondering WHAT CAN BE DONE to restore the ideal balance of 47g weight
<BR>and responsive touch."<FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE=-1>ROGERIO CUNHA
- IC MEMBER OF THE GUILD</FONT></FONT></BLOCKQUOTE>
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