Longest piano tuning ever
Dec. 17th, 2005 11:45 pmI finally got around to calling the piano tuner, because my piano had not only gone out of tune, but had also developed some very annoying key noise.
The tuner came today and ended up spending over two hours with my piano (a routine tuning takes around an hour). Although having to listen to 2+ hours of piano tuning is not exactly pleasant, I am incredibly glad that my tuner is the type to stay as long as it takes to make sure that the piano is completely right. Alas, my piano will not be completely right until January, since it is broken, but only a little. A small part in the damper pedal mechanism is broken, as well as a small plastic part elsewhere. The tuner is ordering new parts. Luckily, I can still play in the meantime. The damper pedal still functions, it is just noisy, and the tuner was able to glue the plastic bit back together so it will hold until the new one arrives.
My piano is nearly twenty years old, and I play it almost every day. Plus, I've moved it twice now. And the vagaries of the New England climate probably cause a slight amount of additional stress on it. The instrument has had its share of key noise, pedal squeaks, and sticky keys, but this is the first time any part of the mechanism has actually broken. It's a good piano, though, and I expect to have it with me for the rest of my life. (I plan on purchasing a baby grand at some point, but I intend to keep this piano, too. Because two pianos are better than one.)
The tuner came today and ended up spending over two hours with my piano (a routine tuning takes around an hour). Although having to listen to 2+ hours of piano tuning is not exactly pleasant, I am incredibly glad that my tuner is the type to stay as long as it takes to make sure that the piano is completely right. Alas, my piano will not be completely right until January, since it is broken, but only a little. A small part in the damper pedal mechanism is broken, as well as a small plastic part elsewhere. The tuner is ordering new parts. Luckily, I can still play in the meantime. The damper pedal still functions, it is just noisy, and the tuner was able to glue the plastic bit back together so it will hold until the new one arrives.
My piano is nearly twenty years old, and I play it almost every day. Plus, I've moved it twice now. And the vagaries of the New England climate probably cause a slight amount of additional stress on it. The instrument has had its share of key noise, pedal squeaks, and sticky keys, but this is the first time any part of the mechanism has actually broken. It's a good piano, though, and I expect to have it with me for the rest of my life. (I plan on purchasing a baby grand at some point, but I intend to keep this piano, too. Because two pianos are better than one.)
Pianos
Date: 2005-12-18 09:25 am (UTC)Re: Pianos
Date: 2005-12-18 07:09 pm (UTC)