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<BODY>Julia,<BR><BR>Whatever you do don't mention=
fish...;-] Of course if someone is tuning a piano on=
a regular basis it should be up or near pitch provided it=
can...which is more often than not...<BR><BR>David=
Ilvedson<BR><BR><BR>
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Original message<BR>From: <ALPHA88X@AOL.COM><BR>To:=
<PIANOTECH@PTG.ORG><BR>Received: Sun, 20 Feb 2005 00:56:40=
EST<BR>Subject: Re: One more tuning question...<BR><BR>
<P align=left><FONT face=arial,helvetica><FONT lang=0 face=Arial=
size=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" PTSIZE="10">In a message dated 2/18/05=
11:50:01 AM Pacific Standard Time, pianoguy@rogers.com=
writes:<BR><BR></P>
<BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px;=
BORDER-LEFT: #0000ff 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"=
TYPE="CITE">Wether a piano gets the 440 treatment depends on=
what its used for and the client. I don"t know about you=
listers...but not all my pianos I service are new, and have=
already been neglected for years. I can only do what I can with=
whats in front of me. I don't consider myself a "tooner" because=
of it.<BR><BR></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>Greeeitngs,=
<BR><BR> I am=
talking about a tooner that has a church as a regular client and=
the piano is way way down. There is just something fishy about=
that. <BR><BR>Julia,<BR>Reading, PA</FONT>=
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