Avoiding Piano Plate Breakage During Tuning
By Gregory Filardo
So far I have not broken a plate but have found that there are tell
tale warnings. I have heard several technicians complain about strobe
tuners but they give you a warning of eminent danger.
First, I tune using the circle of fifths, tensioning the frame equally
rather than just tuning the mid section. I was tuning a Steinway
Duo-Art upright and mid-way through the tuning noticed that a number
of notes unexplainably were going sharp on their own! I also noticed
the overtones (octaves depicted on the tuning wheel) were changing.
None of this could have been detected if you were tuning strictly by
ear.
I decided to investigate and pulled off the thin wood cover board over
the pin block and cast iron frame. Much to my surprise I discovered
an eighth-inch gap had opened between the plate and the pinblock!
I quickly let the tension down on the strings. Next, I removed the
plate bolts, drilled them through the pin block and out through the
back and then installed bolts with lock nuts which I countersunk at the
back side. I then retuned the piano without any problems.
Did anyone ever check the plate contact to the pinblock/frame of the
piano, as sometimes this area is covered and there could be an accident
waiting to happen...
Greg Filardo
|
(Message sent Thu 14 Jun 2007, 14:15:02 GMT, from time zone GMT-0700.) |
|
|