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Default Are there any restorers of Square Pianos out there in D-I-Y land? (what I should have asked)

On Thu, 28 Jan 2021 21:39:48 +0000, newshound
wrote:

On 28/01/2021 18:05, alan_m wrote:
On 28/01/2021 17:41, Paul wrote:
wrote:
Hmmm, a badly structured question. Hopefully it makes more sense now.

On 28/01/2021 12:12,
wrote:
A bit of a long-shot but ... is there anyone out there who has
restored, is restoring, or has worked on a 19th century square piano?


It says here, it has to be restored, before it can be tuned.

https://antiquepianoshop.com/square-grand-pianos/

Makes for a cheap instrument :-) Replacing
all the strings, dampers, and degrade-able materials.
I guess you get to keep the original wood.

You could keep the strings and the "untuneable nature",
if you had one of these autotuners. Average operating
power = 800W to keep the piano in precise tune. The
800W represents the amount of heat needed to pull the
piano from initial tuning state, into tune.

https://newatlas.com/gilmore-self-tu...-system/21425/

So rather than rotate a peg to tune the string,
it uses electricity and heat in the string, to
set the frequency.



These days you could use a spectrum analyser app on a mobile phone to
tune each key.* Play the one note, the app will show the fundamental
frequency, rotate peg to adjust to correct frequency.


Simpler to pay a piano tuner


If you want it done properly.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_key_frequencies

and this is before you consider that the double and triple strings are
not tuned quite the same.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y47O1LCiQgw