I am in a good mood today. I finally moved all instruments on the retail
floor to the new mall store and so I now have the room to move the stacks
(of pianos) around so I can get to them. I call them stacks because they
are stacked-in like a library, and we used to call the book shelves
"stacks" -- and of course the players have stacks as well.
I spent the time to check out all my gutted player players, which I
seldom take in, buy, or acquire. I then searched the spare part
collection of "stacks of stacks."
The results are I found that all but one of my gutted players is no
longer gutted. I found a perfectly fitting Gulbransen stack for the burl
walnut piano. I just have to find the bellows for it.
I found Manualo stacks for two Modellos, one Howard, and one Hamilton and
installed them into their new pianos. I found an almost
perfectly-fitting Standard stack for the oak art-case P. A. Starck. It,
however, will need to have brackets lowered. All the wippens line up
with the poppets, but the stack sits about an inch too high.
I have an Aeolian Stuyvesant Themodist, missing the top stack, but I have
not dragged out all my Themodist stacks; the first two I tried were too
long for the piano case. However, if I can't find the right one, the
mounting board that goes through the middle on which the spoolbox sits
can be trimmed and it should fit. Now if I only had an Amphion stack for
the Bahnsen (St. Louis) piano that has those fat art case legs I like so
much.
I am getting my inventory of Available-for-Rebuild pianos updated. I am
filling out new complete sheets for each piano. Some of you said you
were going to be coming to see the collection and buy a few before we
move. Well, the time is a-wasting. The plain cases are still $250. and
most semi-art cases are now classified as plain cases. Art cases and
oaks are $495.
I will be putting these on the Internet when I get my web page done. I
plan to have the whole catalog of pianos on-line. When this happens, I
suspect the Japanese will be visiting me as I have had calls from them in
the past. I also surprised myself with how many silent pianos I have
(they've never been players). I seem to take only the art cases in
these. The ones for sale are also priced to sell.
Does anyone know a good refinisher who wants to relocate? My present
refinisher has been given a list of 20 pianos that must be "done
yesterday". Let's just say he needs competent help.
Does anyone have a good piano tuner or technician who wants to relocate?
I am inundated with work and I haven't been able to clone myself yet.
D. L. Bullock Piano world St. Louis
[ A Yoke of Bullocks at your shop could move pianos easily...! :)
[ -- Robbie
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