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Wes Flinn RPT - Registered Piano Technician
 
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Piano Definitions

 
Piano Maintenance Programs

  This section is provided to add some helpful concepts of piano ownership not found elsewhere. 
1)  The piano is a machine — it is a physical  machine, and not an electronic device with an
           electric cord to plug in, with knobs to turn to control volume or tone or tuning.  Our
           high-tech culture of today struggles with this idea of purely physical devices like a piano,
           and automatically confuses a piano with other electronic devices of our age.  We compare
           a piano to a Stereo because it produces music, and confuse it with an Electronic Keyboard.

            
           Stereos are wonderful, and do things a piano cannot do.  Electronic Keyboards are also
           wonderful, and are actually Organs that offer electronic wonders that are completely
           outside the ability of a piano.  Likewise, a piano does things that are completely outside the
           ability of an Electronic Keyboard — the only similarity is that they both have keyboards.

           But to capture the incredible magic of the natural acoustic piano, we have to maintain it.
           This includes tuning based on calendar dates, plus regulation and voicing when needed.
 
 
►  2)  A piano by design is always going flat  —  from the time it is manufactured until the
           time it reaches the end of its service life.  The strings are under a tremendous amount of
           tension, from about 20,000 lbs to 65,000 lbs on a huge concert grand piano.  The strings
           are always stretching, especially noticeable when new.  It takes about 15 to 20 tunings
           for any piano to become really "broken in" and settle down to stable tuning behavior —
           with a lightly used home piano this might be 10 years or more.  Once this happens the
           tuning might go gradually flat, but the piano stays relatively in tune to itself, and we
           find mature pianos that sound quite well up to a year or more between tunings.
       
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3)  How often should a piano be tuned?   This is a very complex subject, and needs
     to be considered carefully with the advice of an RPT Technician.  The answer includes
     the condition of the piano, its age, type, location, type of use and the wishes of its
     owner and users.  A "pat" standard or universal answer is not possible.  It's easier
     to answer:  "How often should you buy new shoes?"  "Do you change oil in your car
     as often as a taxi cab?" "When should you wash your car?"  The correct answer is: 
     "It depends.  Let's discuss all your needs and see.  A recording studio tunes its piano
     every day;  a music school like ASU every 30-60 days;  a new piano needs more
     tuning than an older piano," and so on.  It is completely correct to say that how
     much a piano is used does not exactly determine how often it should be tuned. 
     Playing a piano does not necessarily knock it out of tune, but Mother Nature can
     knock out a tuning in 15 minutes with a weather change if the piano does not have
     a climate control system installed.  The final answer to tuning is: "Tune it when it
     needs it, or when you want it done, but once a year even when you don't use it."

4)  The PTG Piano Technicians Guild Website has all the information there is to know
      about piano tuning and maintenance.  It is open to the public.  Go to www.ptg.org
      next click on "Resources" at the left, then move right to the popup menu and click on
      "For Piano Owners", then to "Piano Care Brochures" and "Piano Care Bulletins".

5)   Piano Maintenance Programs include all the different aspects of piano care that this
      entire Website talks about.  These programs are the only way to really care for a piano,   
      and provide  the only path to finding out just how good a piano can sound or be.

      To discuss the subject takes another page of information all to itself —


                  so click on this button below, and we'll start another page:


                                         
Piano Maintenance Programs
 

Petrof 6-ft 4-inch Intarsia Inlay - 1898

 
     

 

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©2010 Piano Tuning Phoenix
Website designed, written and built by Wes Flinn RPT - Registered Piano Technician

info@pianotuningphoenix.com / PO Box 8548, Phoenix, Arizona 85066 USA