Music Trade Review

Issue: 1922 Vol. 75 N. 13

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
12
THE MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
SEPTEMBER 23,
1922
OurTICHNICAL DEPARTMENT
CONDUCTED BY WILLIAM BRAID WHITE
ON AN OLD DIFFICULTY IN DESIGN
Difficulties Experienced in the Search for Me-
chanical Means Toward Tone Production
Among the many difficulties which have been
experienced by piano makers in their search for
mechanical means toward the production of
good tone that difficulty which begins with the
first bass string and ends only with the last one
is certainly the most distressing and, on the
whole, perhaps the most acute. In the old days
the strings of the bass section ran along parallel
with the treble and pianos were made either
long or high enough to assure fair length to the
strings at the lower end of the scale. The very
small uprights, on the other hand, which were
popular in Europe fifty and more years ago,
never ran beyond seven straight octaves and
made no special pretensions to power or quality.
When, however, the genius of the Steinways
began to make itself felt in the art, some sixty
years ago, attention was centered upon the
problem of producing powerful pianos, fit to em-
body the ideals of the school of Liszt and of his
successors. The invention of overstringing
dates, indeed, earlier than this epoch, but the
Steinways and the school to which their work
gave rise first made overstringing a standard
feature in the system of construction. To-day
overstringing is accepted as if it had always
been; yet it undoubtedly, as a system, suffers
from defects which need analysis and under-
standing if they are ever to be remedied.
These defects, nevertheless, do not arise from
any defect in the principle of cross-stringing,
but merely in the opportunities for unscientific
and careless work which this system permits.
Those who study the work of such men as
Theodore Steinway, Jonas Chickering, Siegfried
Hansing and the Mehlins know that these men
all recognized the principle of scientific exact-
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URN YOUR STRAIGHT
PIANOS INTO PLAYERS
T
Individual pneumatic stacks, roll
boxes, bellows, pedal actions, ex-
pression boxes.
Manufacturers, dealers, tuners and
repair men supplied with player
actions for straight pianos.

JENKINSON PLAYER ACTION CO., I n c .
1522 Central Ave.
Cincinnati, O.
FAUST SCHOOL
OF TUNING
ness as not merely applicable, but positively
essential, to any right embodiment of the oppor-
tunities for greater length and power in the
bass, to which the system of cross-stringing
gives rise. In the work of these scientific minds
we see how far it is possible to carry scientific
accuracy, with resulting tonal powers and
beauties which the world has been obliged to
recognize and to crown with applause.
On the other hand, it will not be denied by
any conscientious student that the general run.
of modern pianos suffers from obvious and un-
fortunate lapses from uniformity and beauty in
the regions of the cross-stringing. There is a
bad place which in most pianos has come almost
to be accepted as inevitable. I refer, of course,
to the so-called "break" where the cross-string-
ing begins. Now, it is evident that there may
very likely be always some difficulty, at least
in small grands and small uprights, about get-
ting a good tonal result from the last one or
two strings in the treble immediately adjacent
to the beginning of the overstrung section. Yet
even this difficulty can be overcome. On the
other hand, there is really no excuse for the
defect which is almost universal in ordinary
pianos, namely, for that sudden change in ten-
sion, that hollowness at one end and tubbiness
at the other which characterizes the sounds of
the bass section. It is simply all wrong that a
piano which is beautiful from its upper treble
end down to middle C should suddenly begin
to deteriorate in tonal quality just as the over-
stringing begins, and become steadily worse
until it ends in a mere hollow groan down in
the lowest bass. There is no need for this de-
fect, which, nevertheless, is so common as
almost to be taken for granted.
When one finds a piano of large size and
apparently of great capacity for tone, emitting
sounds which surprise only by their dullness and
feebleness, one may be fairly sure that the
Concord School of Piano Tuning
TUNING,
Complete Coarse In
REPAIRING, REGULATING
POLISHING
AND
GEORGE S. CARL, Director
601 West 51st 8t.
New York City
Three doors from the Danquard Player Artlon School
VALUABLE BOOK
ON REFINISHING
FREE
Just send your name and address and get this
free book, which tells how damaged or worn
surfaces, in any finish, can quickly and
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Every dealer, repair man and re-
finisher should read it. Sent post-
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Write for it now—a card will do.
M. L. CAMPBELL CO.
2328 Penn St.
TUNERS
trouble lies in the mixture of the problem which
has been put before the tone-regulator. Faced
by a bass which is totally at variance with the
rest of the scale the tone-regulator has only
one course open to him. Whatever virtues that
bass may possess (and it probably possesses
some) must be sacrificed. The weakest spot in
the whole scale must be picked out and all the
others by judicious needling brought down to
its level. The result is an uniformity, indeed,
but an uniformity of dullness and almost of
lifelessness. Let any one who is accustomed to
observe, as well as merely to hear, run over
in his mind all the pianos with which he is more
or less intimately acquainted. Let him ask him-
self how many of them stand out from their
fellows for some tonal distinction and beauty.
He will be obliged to consider very carefully
before he can name many, and sometimes he
will have to say that he cannot call to mind
any at all.
The fault is, of course, with the design and
execution of the bass end of the scale. The
bass strings are commonly too heavy, too stiff
and too short. Let not the bass string maker,
however, be blamed for this. He has worked
out from his experience formulae which fit, and
very well, too, the average case. He is not ac-
customed to receive from the manufacturer of
pianos proper instructions as to the weight of
the strings which he is to make. Yet this point
of the weight is the crucial point. In a word,
the bass string problem can only be solved
when the scale draughtsman knows what weight
each of his strings should have in order to pro-
duce a given kind of tone from a given length.
This is not so difficult a problem in the case of
the treble strings, but even there it is seldom
taken up and actually solved. On the con-
trary, empirical knowledge is usually relied on
and although its results are often good they are
more often indifferent or bad. As for the bass
section, it is indeed rather more difficult to de-
termine what the weights should be, but for-
tunately for those of us who are not mathema-
ticians the American Steely & Wire Co. some
years ago published, under the supervision of
Frank E. Morton, valuable tables which make it
a simple matter to determine what core and
covering wire should be used for bass strings of
any length, to obtain a desired weight. Thus
there is no longer any excuse for inexactness,
nor will the bass string maker be displeased to
receive instructions, of which the due execution
will relieve him from further tonal responsi-
bility.
But what should the weight be? This again
is a question which can be solved by the aid
of the A. S. W. tables. The general idea is to
preserve even tension throughout the bass sec-
tion, at a level which should be only a little
higher than that which should prevail through-
Kansas City, Mo.
Here are
BASS STRINGS
"in it's lo^yeat^
with upwards ot
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BADE MASK
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
SEPTEMBER 23, 1922
THE
out the treble. Given this level the question of
weight for each string is easily solved from the
pitch and length. The core and covering wire
may then be directly determined from the tables.
Now, the point of all this discussion is sim-
ply that if the bass section be designed with
such an approach to scientific accuracy as I have
indicated it will always be possible to determine
in advance a design and construction which will
give a bass tolerably uniform in result with the
rest of the piano. And it is the moral of this
argument that the neglect of these precautions,
a neglect far more common than is usually sup-
posed, nullifies so many well-meant attempts at
good tone production.
The piano trade needs a little understanding
of these facts and a discussion of this sort can-
not therefore be other than useful.
MUSIC TRADE
13
REVIEW
servations on refinishing cases. He says: "For
refinishing cases I now invariably use Brush
Amalgamator with steel wool and the best
brush obtainable. I have tried four kinds of
varnish dissolvent, but find the Brush Amalga-
mator superior to any other. It is put up by
the Zenith Chemical Works, of Chicago, at six
dollars per gallon."
I suppose that the idea is to rub down the
surfaces of the old piano with the steel wool
until they are smooth and then use the Amal-
gamator as a binding surface-coat to pull the
old varnish together. I presume that the new
surface is then built up on this basis. It sounds
all right, and if the Amalgamator works well
that ought to be all that is necessary.
ABOUT KEEPING SCRAP BOOKS
THE PACKARD LINE IN KANSAS CITY
Edison Shop Arranges to Handle Packard and
Bond Lines of Pianos Exclusively
FORT WAYNE, IND., September 18.—The Packard
Piano Co. reports that business, so far as it is
concerned, is showing a very encouraging im-
provement and all indications point to a splen-
did Fall business. The company has established
a number of very substantial agencies recently,
among them the Edison Shop in Kansas City,
Mo., which has heretofore handled only Edison
phonographs. When it was decided to put in
a line of pianos those at the head of the Edison
Shop selected the Packard and Bond lines,
which they will handle exclusively in that terri-
tory. An inspection of the Packard factory was
made before the deal was closed by the execu-
tives of the Edison Shop.
The following is also interesting from the
REMEDIES FOR BAD TREBLE TONE
same correspondent: "I have taken an old
"Dear Mr. White: Regarding that bad tone ledger and cut out part of each leaf and am
in the extreme treble, in the case where you pasting cuttings from The Review's Technical
MANY ENROLL AT POLK SCHOOL
recommend bending the hammer shanks to Department into it. This makes a neat scrap
make the hammers strike lower down:
book, besides giving me fresh information on Largest Enrollment in History at Tuning School
"Why not lower the action slightly by screw- subjects in which I may be interested. Pass the
—Future Outlook Bright
ing down the action props a little?
idea along, for I think that every tuner ought
"I have followed this plan in fitting in new to have a Review scrap book."
The Polk School of Piano Tuning, Valparaiso,
actions and have found it very satisfactory. Of
Ind., has just opened its twenty-third successful
course, in the case of old actions, to let the
year with a larger enrollment than ever before
COMMUNICATIONS
treble end down much would throw the bass
in its history, according to a report by W. R.
hammers and dampers away off, but I have are solicited and always welcome. They should Powell, secretary. The student body consists
sometimes lowered the whole action with very be sent to William Braid White, care The of many dealers, salesmen and tuners who have
satisfactory results. Respectfully, A. R. Bell, Music Trade Review, 373 Fourth avenue, New come to the school to obtain a thorough knowl-
Greensboro, N. C."
York, N. Y.
edge of all the modern makes and models of
When the action can be let down at one end
player and electric player-piano mechanisms.
without damaging the line of the hammers at
The management has just added all of the
THOS. A. EDISON'S CONTRIBUTION
their other end it ought to be all right to do as
very latest creations in the player industry to
Mr. Bell suggests. But there is danger in med-
A despatch from Alexandropol, Armenia, the equipment and is prepared to train men
dling with the action in this way, simply be- states that sixty carloads of foodstuffs which to become thoroughly expert in every phase of
cause the effect may go further than one wished the school children of New Jersey contributed player-piano and electric player-piano tuning,
it to. On the other hand, of course, hammer- to the American Orphan City, where the Near repairing and rebuilding.
lines are usually too high rather than too low
The outlook for the future has never been so
and tone can often be improved by a general East Relief is maintaining 20,000 Armenian good. Nearly all of the manufacturers have
children,
have
arrived
there.
Among
the
in-
letting down from end to end.
teresting items were seventy-seven cases of placed their actions in the school, for instruc-
phonographs, the personal gift of Thos. A. tion purposes, and have furnished assistance in
OLD ACTIONS THAT STICK
many ways.
Edison.
"Dear Mr. White: I am having trouble with
an old action which sticks in the treble, but not
in the key part of the action. Have the springs
become weak through age? Or is the action
THE CELEBRATED
perhaps not well balanced? A. R. Bell, Greens-
boro, N. C."
It is not unusual to find old actions without
any hammer-spring rail. In this case the
remedy is, of course, obvious. Damper springs
do not often fail, but in old pianos this some-
times occurs. It is not difficult to make trial
of them, and if they appear to have lost their
(FELTEN & GUILLEAUME)
life they may be replaced, possibly with the re-
pair springs which I mentioned last week.
In a good many old actions one finds cen-
ters not so well designed and made as they
are in modern work. If the centers on the pres-
ent case are sticking the bushings may be shrunk
by touching- them with a little alcohol-water
IN BLACK, RED and GREEN
mixture (two parts water to one part alcohol),
LABEL BRANDS
but it would be well also to look to the pins
and see whether any of these have become stuck
up with verdigris through exposure to damp-
ness. In older days actions were not always
protected by the use of German silver and other
precautions.
F & G
IMPORTED
MUSIC WIRE
IS UNEXCELLED
A METHOD FOR REFINISHINQ CASES
A correspondent presents the following ob-
USED PIANOS
Repaired—Ready to Retail
The " F & G " Blue Label Brand is again being
used by Rudolph C. Koch in the manufacture
of the Reinwarth Covered Bass Strings
For TUNERS and REPAIRERS we have the
convenient one quarter pound clamps
All Make* from
$4O up
F. O. B. Brooklyn, in carloads of 12 or more.
Any quantity. Less than carload lots also.
HILL & SONS
Phone Evergreen 8180
1365-1375 Myrtle Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
HAMMACHER, SCHLEMMER & CO.
PIANO AND PLAYER HARDWARE, FELTS AND TOOLS
NEW YORK SINCE 1848
4th Ave. and 13th St.

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