Sunday 28 May 2023

Lubrication of Piano Parts

When pianos are built, the builders concern themselves with lubrication of moving parts in a rather fundamental way. They are concerned with new material assembled under controlled atmospheric conditions and lubrication is a very minor consideration in construction process. Obvious friction points such as those in the trap work are greased or graphited. In that complicated mechanism called the action, many friction points are treated with a permanent lubrication such as burnished graphite or were designed to be self-lubricating through use of felt against metal or, more recently, teflon against metal.

When the pianos are completed and shipped, further thought is not given to lubrication since factory people generally have no other contact with the instruments. Once the pianos are sold, however, a whole new set of problems begins to develop, including wear and tear, atmospheric extremes, abuse, and neglect. Lubrication is also one of these problems.

The word “lubricate” comes from Latin lubricare, which means “to make slippery.” The trick with piano friction points is to make them slippery and keep them slippery for extended periods of time. A lack of lubrication creates two general problems - sluggish response of moving parts and noise in the form of squeaks.

The anatomy of the piano creates other problems. There are no reservoirs to store lubrication such as oil pans or grease cups. Instead, the lubricants often must function between dissimilar materials, usually as thin films while exposed to accumulating dust and dirt. They must hold well through periods of use, must break down during disuse, and must not react with the host materials by creating any chemical change.

With the above criteria in mind, let examine the materials used as piano part lubricants. They fall into two general categories: (1) Solids and powdered solids include soapstone, talc, graphite, and teflon. (2) Liquids include tallow, grease of various kinds, and liquids that utilize some of the powders in suspension. The list of liquids must be expanded to include the sprays available today that have proven to be useful and time saving.

Many years ago one of the standard lubricants for piano parts was mutton tallow into which was stirred a fair amount of talc or baby powder. With the demise of the neighbourhood butcher shop, mutton tallow has been difficult to acquire. However, if you know a butcher who can get you some mutton fat, you can make a life-time supply of mutton tallow lubricant very inexpensively. Simply put the raw fat in a frying pan and fry it at low heat until it turns to a liquid. Skim or strain the liquid so as to separate it from any fiber residue and allow it to cool. The tallow will be a white waxlike grease. An additional reheating and skimming will improve the quality by leaving behind any missed residue or poor-quality fat. Into this refined tallow stir as much Johnson’s baby powder as it will hold without losing its consistency as a grease.

A contemporary substitute for mutton tallow and talc is... 

 

Read more at:

https://www.professionalpianotunerlondon.co.uk/post/lubrication-of-piano-parts 



Monday 22 May 2023

Tuning By Plucking

One useful technique I forgot to mention in last month’s blog post on treble tuning is plucking. If you are having difficulty hearing a unison or even an octave in the high treble, then pluck the strings and listen to the relative pitch.

This approach, in combination with the key, may help clear things up a bit. (If you have not read my last post, I suggest you do so to maintain continuity with this one.) Every note must be tested until you know that it is right, or as right as possible, before going on to the next string. This applies to every aspect of tuning, temperament, treble, and bass, and cannot be overly stressed here. After completing the temperament, I start tuning the bass by tuning E3 so its fifth (B3) is as pure as possible without an overly rough fourth (A3), and so the third (G#3) and sixth (C#o) retrogress evenly relative to their adjacent intervals.

I have found the third/tenth test useful, but none of the above are as important as the sound of the octave itself. 

The one thing that does come out rather rapidly is an error in the temperament. One obvious error is the slanted temperament. This is my term for the temperament where everything appears to work out well but the thirds progress too slowly or too rapidly - as shown by roller-coastering of the retrogressive thirds. If the roller-coastering is minor it can be ignored (but remembered for correction at the next tuning). If the error is excessive, then the temperament must be retuned. If the first few thirds going into the bass are too fast, the temperament slope is ... 

Read more at:

https://www.professionalpianotunerlondon.co.uk/post/tuning-by-plucking 

Sunday 14 May 2023

Key-Weighting and Tuning

My customer and piano teacher Jennifer C. from London Kensington asks:

How can I improve the tuning with key-weighting on my Yamaha C3?


Answer:

Dear Jennifer,

This blog post is intended to suggest a possibly lesser known “aid” for tuning the entire piano. Not included in this discussion are such basics as temperament, tuning checks to use, methods of tuning and electronic instruments if one is used. This article will focus on “fine tuning” a piano that is already at the A440 pitch level and in fairly good, even tensions in all sections. While tuning certain pianos, particularly the older uprights, all of us have encountered certain strings, usually the longer tenor ones, that suddenly start to ring or sound while tuning due to sympathetic vibration. It was exactly this situation that prompted further study and the exploration of these “open” strings as an aid in aural tuning. It was further noted that the more in phase the octave being tuned, the louder and clearer the sing-through sound created by sympathetic vibration. 

This blog post assumes that the reader also understands at least some of the physical characteristics of vibrating piano strings, their modes, partials and inharmonicities. The principal of weighting keys is to deliberately raise the damper, freeing the string to sound sympathetically as related intervals are being tuned. The louder and clearer the sound of the weighted-open note, the better in tune the interval being tuned. This is the main principle of the system. Primary intervals used in key-weight tuning are the octave, fifth, octave fifth and the double octave fifth. We hope to stimulate enough reader interest for many to actually experiment with the use of key-weighted open sounding strings in tuning. 

One very discriminate college piano teacher once remarked, “I am more interested in the fifth being in tune than the simple octave.” Of course, what she was favouring was...

Read more at:

https://www.professionalpianotunerlondon.co.uk/post/key-weighting-and-tuning 



Monday 8 May 2023

Advice for a Tuning Setback

My friend Peter W. from London, Ealing who is a novice piano tuner asks me:

In the last few months, I have been having a setback in my tunings. I am experiencing a problem which is adding an extra hour onto my one hour and 45 minute tuning time. 

I am assuming I am doing something wrong. I set the temperament first then usually do the bass next, but because of this problem I go first to the tenor and treble, and sometimes do a pitch raise in the high treble section (after the last break). By the time I complete the bass section, my area above the temperament is flat and occasionally my temperament is out. 

My experience is different with each piano, but as always the treble section after the last break is always flat. This is always a problem when the pitch is 5 cents flat or lo-20 cents flat. Any piano which is over 20 cents flat I do a pitch raise and then a fine tune and I still encounter this problem. I always set the pins and pound out the keys to settle the strings. 

Can you tell me what I may be doing wrong?

Read the answer at my website:

https://www.professionalpianotunerlondon.co.uk/post/advice-for-a-tuning-setback


Monday 1 May 2023

Piano Tuning Problems in the Upper Register

My customer Kathy M. from London, Fulham asks me: 

"Can you explain more about this tuning on the treble section? It doesn't really help the sound quality! If so, can you solve the problem?"

Read the answer at my website:

https://www.professionalpianotunerlondon.co.uk/post/piano-tuning-problems-in-the-upper-register