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Barbara -<br>
I am a saver...especially of list email. Eventually (or not) I get
to read some of it. I just saw this post from last October, without
any indication of an on-line response. In the unlikely event that
you found no satisfaction, or gave up, the maker was Al Grenning, in
Boonville, NY. Since his email address is listed in the directory,
I suppose there's no harm in my posting it
...ALGRENNING@AOL.COM. If you contact him, send my
regards.<br><br>
David Skolnik<br>
Hastings on Hudson, NY<br><br>
<br>
At 12:58 PM 10/19/2004 -0500, you wrote:<br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite=""><font face="arial" size=2>Hi
all,<br>
</font> <br>
<font face="arial" size=2>I have discovered while setting up and actually
trying to work in my new (moved) shop, that I'm having a hard time
finding things. Golly, I remember where everything was in my shop
at Illinois Wesleyan 9 years ago! :-) I just realized
that a few things must have gotten lost in the moves from Texas and back
(it's a little late to file a claim). <br>
</font> <br>
<font face="arial" size=2>Anyway, strapped to my big old honking pipe
clamps, was a jig--a long thin piece of plexiglass with rectanglar
holders on each end that attached to hammer shanks on each end of a grand
action. When it was attached, one cold take the special pencils (I
still have them!) and mark the location of the strings--making hammer
spacing on the bench easier--especially when the piano is miles
away. I got it at a convention probably around '84-'85 (?) and I
"think" it was David Betts who sold them. Does anybody
remember these, who made them, and what they were called?----(before I
drop David a line saying, "Hey, was it you who sold those gizmos and
are you still making and selling them?") :-) <br>
</font> <br>
<br>
<font face="arial" size=2>Barbara Richmond, RPT<br>
asking, "Dang.....where's my stuff?"<br>
somewhere near Peoria, IL</font></blockquote></body>
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