Thursday, December 19, 2013

A neat looking piano

This piano is 1954 Wurlitzer spinet. Yes those light colored panels are a vinyl type material with a pattern that sort of makes it look like stone. 

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Hammer Reshaping

If your hammers have grooves like these it could help the tone of your piano immensely by having them reshaped. It gets rid of/diminishes the grooves and exposes a new layer of felt. The tiny grooves grab the strings for a split second dulling the tone of your piano.

Friday, September 6, 2013

Getting quality work

These silver colored bridge pin "replacement" pieces in the middle of the photo are the result of a lazy or uneducated piano technician.
The staples holding the strings to the bridge are an example of the same lazy or uneducated technician.

      There is no need for this type of work. I wouldn't even bet that this guy even saved the owners any money by going this route. If I were a betting man I would bet that he saved himself a couple of hours and charged the customer about the same amount. There is an issue with the strings coming off of the bridge on this piano hence the staples you see in the bottom photo. It could be structural and it could be that it was 160 cents low. (100 cents is an entire 1/2 step in notes.) So when you played an A on this piano you were hearing somewhere between G# and G. That creates a lot of slack in the piano strings allowing the piano to lay around in ways that it was not designed to do. Most pianos have between 17 and 22 tons of pressure pulling on the cast iron plate when they are to pitch, and tuned correctly. Allowing this kind of slack for too many years can cause structural problems or the sound board to flatten out. Both of these problems are usually either permanent or VERY, VERY expensive to fix. (Did I say VERY?)  




Tuesday, June 25, 2013

The cost of tuning a paino

it seems that some balk at the cost of having their piano tuned. While it varies greatly from tuner to tuner and region to region, a safe assumption would be between $90-$150 for a standard tuning. What you need to remember is the cost of not "tuning" it. Typically when your tuner comes to visit he will check your piano over, this can nip some major problems in the bud(I refer to my prior post MICE!). It can also keep other problems from forming. We need to remember these things are mostly wood, when tuned properly they are designed to have around 17,000lbs. of force from the strings. If we let them get out of these parameters they can warp pr crack pr things can come unglued over time.
moorepiano.com

What makes my piano go out of tune?

Simply stated, Humidity or the lack of it.
The soundboard on the back of your piano(it will look like boards laid diagonally 45deg.) either absorbs or dissipates water(humidity). This changes the dimensions of the soundboard and either stretches or loosens the strings knocking them out of tune. When we are talking about tuning though we are talking about minute levels of movement to make a piano sound horrible. Some piano's will go out of tune all together some will not. The latter of these is very noticeable it will start to have a ragged sound to it.
Moore's Piano Service

MICE!

Well today I tuned an upright that a mouse, mice (or is it meeses) had gotten into and made a nest and had gone to the bathroom. After donning a dust mask ( I should have put gloves on but didn't have any) I proceeded to vacuum up the feces. These owners were very lucky, they proceeded to tell me that they had had a mouse problem a "couple" of years ago but it had been taken care of. The mice had not eaten any of the felt for their nest and the urine had not stained too badly or eaten through anything. The problem that did exist was that they hadn't had their piano tuned in 8 years, so for the past few years every time she sat to play that piano her fingers and face were only inches away from hundreds of mouse droppings.
Visit Moore's Piano Service at www.moorepiano.com