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Susan,<br>
I didn't do any string leveling. I had my hands full for the time
allotted. It seems to have been levelled aggressively, which, come
to think of it, is where the problem was. With the pitch
correction, I had pulled the bend over the capo a bit. Not enough
to clear it probably. Mind you, pulling treble strings 44cents up
plus 34% overpull usually does give you a few extra string noises until
things stabilize. <br><br>
The piano is new and the humidity is high so I don't think the bridge
pins were loose. The tuning pins sure weren't.<br><br>
Andrew<br><br>
At 12:22 AM 8/5/2005, you wrote:<br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite=""><font size=2> </font> <br>
Susan <br>
yes & Perhaps wee bit more craftsmanship at
the factory. The list of complaints seems to be getting longer<br>
Dale<br>
<dl>
<dd><font size=2>At 01:07 PM 8/4/2005 -0500, Andrew wrote:<br>
<dd>>A number of single strings in the high treble were
warbling. Tried gentle <br>
<dd>>seating of strings and pins to very little effect.<br><br>
<br>
<dd>Possibly putting a drop of CA glue at the base of the front bridge
pins? <br>
<dd>For warblers, that is.</font><br><br>
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