Music Trade Review

Issue: 1927 Vol. 84 N. 13

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
TECHNICAL^SUPPIY DEPARTMENT
William Braid White, Technical Editor
back after another tuner has entirely failed,
I am sure to find tuning pins loose.
The Old-Timer's Fate
"Here is more evidence against the modern
system of house heating. I was recently asked
Tuner, in Analysis of the Situation, Points Out That Majority of Loose Tuning Pin to restore a piano which evidently had been
Troubles To-day Are Due Primarily to Modern Heating Systems
made some time between 1825 and 1835. Be-
fore I took the old piano apart I was very care-
ful to note every detail of the construction. It
by
the
pioneers
of
the
industry
(and
I
will
HE following letter is written by the
chairman of the Indianapolis Division of grant, in addition, the advantage of modern was delivered to my house some time in June
the National Association of Piano Tuners, construction methods), tuning pins in wooden and went through the Summer months in fine
and deals, in frank and incisive language, with wrest planks under modern conditions would shape. Thirty days after the heat was turned
the causes of loose tuning pins and instability loosen up just the same. No pieces of wood on in the Fall, however, the pin block showed
of tune, from the standpoint of a man who ever made or put together will keep pins tight some cracks. (I have furnace heat, by the
deals with these things in the home where the under the heating conditions of to-day, where way.) Before I could stop the drying-out
trouble begins and who has been studying moisture content runs from 85 per cent to 95 process by means of a sufficient quantity of
per cent in the Summer to as low as 20 per water placed around the house to evaporate
them in that environment for many years.
No one can doubt any longer that piano cent in the Winter. The fibres of the wood into the atmosphere, there were two large
construction faces something like a crisis in around each pin become so crushed that even cracks the length of the whole pin-block, wide
respect of this question of instability. Mr. when they have dried out to normal extent enough to drop a match into. This block was
Poarch has laid his finger on a place that has the wood cannot return to its original size. made in one piece, not built-up like the mod-
been sore for a long time, and what he says This is just as when a piece of wood has been ern planks.
"Such experiences might not be considered
will be echoed, I think, by many tuners. Here hit with a hammer and bruised or dented. It
will recover to some extent, if treated by the conclusive against the heating systems in vogue.
is his letter:
"For some time I have been sitting back, application of moisture to make it swell, but But there is more evidence on hand. If one
watching and keeping in close touch with some it will never come back to the smooth surface brings into a modern house one of the old
square pianos, which has rested peacefully for
vital questions concerning the piano, its manu- it had originally.
"Let me adduce some further facts in sup- years in a stove or open-grate heated house,
facturing and merchandising problems. It
it is sure soon to begin to cut up like a bronco,
seems to me that, instead of there being a port of my opinion.
staying in tune only two weeks at a time.
solution in sight, the whole matter has drifted
Stove vs. Furnace
Then, in about ninety days, a string here and
into a still worse state of misunderstanding.
"When I first started to tune for the public,
"When, however, the facts are faced honestly twenty years and more ago, I wa.> sent out there will slip, until at the end of six months
the thing looks like an unkempt wire fence.
we may arrive at a solid foundation.
into places where the stove for heating held
"It is evident that something must be done
"Tuning is just now passing through a re- full sway, instead of to up-to-date homes
in
this situation, with the cards face up on
constructive program which promises a little where modern heating was used. In none of
better understanding. But it will never be the former places did I ever encounter a piano the table. If the whole thing were fairly
settled until information has taken the place with loose tuning pins. To-day, sometimes, I ventilated I have no doubt as to the outcome,
of selfishness, ignorance and over-claimed go back and tune one of those old instruments which would benefit everybody.
"I am not trying to furinsh an alibi to
merit.
and invariably find it in a condition much better
"What I say is this. No piano can be kept than I had expected. And those houses still manufacturers. I am rather bringing an in-
dictment against both manufacturers and mer-
in shape without four to six tunings a year have their stoves for heating.
chandisers, because they have not taken the
and possibly more, if it is to be kept to pitch
"I have it thrown in my face every day that
somewhere within reason, in modern heating pianos are 'not built to-day as good as they facts into account and dealt openly with them,
1
conditions, where the heat sources are steam, once were.' I know that this is untrue, but because they have not in this respect dealt
hot water, hot air, or oil burners (the last- it is hopeless to try to explain the facts, even fairly with the customer. As Frank E. Norton,
named being more like a dry kiln than anything to the average self-respecting salesman, much of the American Steel & Wire Co., once said:
'We have not taken the public into our con-
else).
more to a public devoid of understanding and fidence.' And my comment on this is that
"And it is right here that the question of, even interest.
»>ur industry is digging its own grave prema-
loose tuning pins comes in to worry both the-
"As further evidence, I have known not one turely because it will not progress. It need*
manufacturer and the merchant.
but hundreds of cases where the ^owners of
"And I say that when this question is Stove-heated houses became progressive, had to clean house, thoroughly.
analyzed it is found to rest on one thing only, the old place remodeled, rooms done over,
; and that neither workmanship nor materials.
stairways changed, and a furnace installed.
Houses and Heat
What happens? Why, my reputation as a tuner
"Twenty-five years ago loose pins were al- with these people at once begins to slip. They
Associate, American Society of Mechanical
most unheard of. Why? Because in those days think that I am not doing the kind of work
Engineers; Chairman, Wood Industries
, the average homo was not equipped with a 1 once did. Later on, if and when I am called
Division, A. S. M. E.; Member, American
highly efficient heating system such as we have
Physical Society; Member, National Piano
to-day, although such systems were in exist-
Technicians' Association.
EASY TO REPAIR
ence. Now, to-day the average American home
is not only equipped with such a system, but
Consulting Engineer to
DAMAGED FINISHES
'.• is much smaller, adding to the troubles of
OU can easily repair the damage
the Piano Industry
to varnished surfaces through fol-
•: pianos by subjecting them to still greater
lowing the instructions given in our
•,:, changes. We all know that pianos ought to
Tonally and Mechanically Correct Scales
book "How to Repair Damage to Var-
Toaal and Technical Surreys of Product
t be placed as far as possible away from heat
nished Surfaces." Dealers everywhere
Tonal Betterment Work In Factories
i sources, but we also know that they are often
are enthusiastic over the ease with
placed very close to these. I have found pianos
which this is done—and the losses
References to manufacturer* of unquestioned
which have been eliminated. A copy
• standing over hot-air registers or over heating
position In Industry
will
be
sent
to
you
free
upon
request.
i, pipes beneath the floor, or over a basement
'heating system.
For particulars, mddress
: "Now, even if the finest virgin timber could
209 South State Street, CHICAGO
loos W. 8th St.
Kansas City, Mo.
•still be had and were treated exactly as it was
Interior Heating Systems in the Home
and Their Effect on the Pianoforte
T
William Braid White
Y
The M. L. Campbell Co.
Punchings
Washers
Bridle Straps
581437th Ave.
George W. Braunsdor£, Inc.
Piano Tuners
Also—Felts
anil
Cloths, Furnished
in Any Quantity
Direct Manufacturers of
and Technicians
are In demand. The trade needs tuners, retru-
lators and repairmen. Practical Shop School.
Send for Catalog M
Y. M. C. A. Piano Technicians School
TUNERS' TRADE SOLICITED
Woodside, L. I., N. Y.
39
1421 Arch St.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
40
The Music Trade Review
MARCH 26, 1927
The Technical and Supply Department—(Continued from page 39)
"To go back to the tuning-pin question. \
am not so unpractical an idealist as to expect
that purchasers of pianos can be induced to buy
expensive hygrometers and stand over them
to watch every change of both humidity and
temperature. But when the public has been
brought to realize that our modern ways of
living, with regard to artificial heat, render it
impossible for any manufacturer to build an
article of wood, whether furniture, piano or
what not, which will withstand the conditions
in which it must be used, then at least we
shall have a chance of getting the question dis-
cussed openly and with a chance of favorable
action.
"I have checked atmospheric conditions my-
self this Winter, with a hygrometer, in houses
where I have tuned, and have found not un-
common readings of 23 per cent moisture
content indoors, with the average between 28
per cent and 30 per cent. Compare these with
the report of the United States Weather Bu-
reau, which gave during thirteen days of
August and September last year an average
of 90 per cent. These figures apply only, of
course, to my own neighborhood, but the
analogy is good for all Northern parts of the
country.
"And as a matter of fact, remedies are not
so difficult as they might appear to be. It is
mainly a question of narrowing the range of
moisture content to a width nearer to that
which prevailed thirty or forty years ago. This
can be brought about by public education and
then could be satisfactorily settled. But it
will take frankness, truth and education.—L.
M. Poarch, Indianapolis, Ind."
Comment
There will be no question, I think, as to the
importance of Mr. Poarch's contribution, nor
as to the essential truth of what he says. Many
years ago this very point was brought up
before the Tuners' Association by Chastain
O'Harrow, of Lima, Ohio, who had made a
study of the facts and arrived at precisely the
same conclusions, although he was dealing with
a range of conditions by no means so extreme
as that of to-day. It is difficult to escape the
conclusion that, as modern heating methods
become more efficient, furniture, pianos and
other wooden articles will be subjected to con-
tinually greater strains, to sustain which they
are now almost wholly unfitted.
It is certainly true that a great deal of the
present complaint about loose tuning pins has
its foundation in the facts which Mr. Poarch
sets forth. And if the question be asked, what
are we going to do about it, the answer is that
we must educate people to regard a fair con-
tent of moisture as absolutely essential to the
health of their pianos, and quite as much, of
themselves. It is all a question of range. An
average moisture content of 50 per cent main-
tained all Winter in the average home would
.keep the average piano in good shape for years.
I should much like to get more opinions,
and especially more facts, on this vital sub-
ject, and invite all concerned to submit their
findings so that we may do something to
FAUST SCHOOL
OF TUNING
Standard of America
Alumni of 2000
Piano Tuning, Pipe and Reed
Organ and Player Piano
YEAR BOOK FREE
27-29 Gainsboro Street
BOSTON, MASS.
Tuners and Repairers
Our new illustrated catalogue of Piano and
Player Hardware Felts and Tools is now
ready. If you haven't received your copy
please let us know.
OTTO R. TREFZ, JR.
2110 Fairmount Ave.
Phila., Pa.
secure that ventilation which the whole ques-
tion so badly needs.
as other subjects relative to the art of piano-
case making.
Correspondence
Denver Wants the
Piano Tuners' Convention
should be addressed to William Braid White,
5149 Agatite avenue, Chicago.
"Veneers and Plywood"
an Interesting Volume
New Book Has as One of Its Authors Meinrad
Wulpi, of the National Bench Manufacturers'
Association
The craftsmanship and artistry of veneers
and plywood, as well as modern production
methods and present-day utility, are treated in
detail in the new book entitled "Veneers and
Plywood," written by E. Vernon Knight and
Meinrad Wulpi. The latter is well known to
the trade as commissioner of the National
Association of Piano Bench & Stool Manu-
facturers.
The aim of the book is to set forth the facts,
both historical and technical, relating to the
origin and present-day production of veneers
and of plywood. A glance through the table
of contents indicates the broad treatment of
the subject, the practical helps offered to
craftsmen in woodwork and cabinetry, as well
as extensive and correct information of an
educational nature.
The importance of plywood in the production
of pianos and other musical instruments, good
furniture and panels is emphasized. The trade
will no doubt also be interested in the text
treating with marquetry and inlays, which gives
a historic description of the methods of early
decorative work.
The technic of cutting marquetry, the mak-
ing of inlaid borders and appliques or overlays,
subjects which are now occupying the atten-
tion of the trade, are also discussed, as well
DENVER, COL., March 12.—The Denver unit of
the National Association of Piano Tuners,
aided and abetted by music dealers and the
Chamber of Commerce, has started ways and
means to bring the 1928 convention of the
National Association to Denver. Francis E.
Tate, president of the Denver unit, addressing
a meeting of his associates and members of
the music dealers and the Chamber of Com-
merce, said he believed the National Associa-
tion would come if properly invited, and when
Frank D. Darrow, of the Darrow Music Co.,
and Will R. Owens, of the Chamber of Com-
merce, got through speaking, Mr. Tatc had
nothing left but to bring on the boys and
Denver will do the rest.
Tariff Classification
Imported machines, used in making and hard-
ening- woolen felt, were correctly classified as
textile machinery, with duty at the rate of 35
per cent ad valorem, under Paragraph 372, Act
of 1922, according to a decision given recently
by the Customs Court of New York denying
relief to the Western Felt Works, Chicago.
Claim was made for duty at but 30 per cent ad
valorem under said Paragraph 372 as machines
or parts thereof not specifically provided for.
With Montelius
Hugh Campbell has become affiliated with the
Montelius Music House, 220 Pine street, Seattle,
Wash., and the name of the company has been
changed to the Montelius-Campbell Music
House.
Tuners Carrying Case
LIGHT—COMPACT—SERVICEABLE
Weighs Only 6 Pounds
Outside measurements 15}4 inches long, 7
inches wide, 8 inches high.
No. 150—Covered with seal grain imitation
leather. Each $13.00
No. 200—Covered with genuine black cow-
hide leather. Each $20.00 F.O.B. New York.
When closed the aluminum
trays nest together over the large
compartment, which measures
13^g" x 6" x 4". The two left hand
trays measure 13^4" x 2 l / A " x iy 8 "
and the two right hand trays 13^g"
x &/{ x iy 8 ". The partitions in
right hand trays are adjustable or
may be removed. Case is fitted
with a very secure lock and solid
brass, highly nickel-plated hard-
ware.
We have a separate Department to take care of special requirements
of tuners and repairers. Mail orders for action parts, repair materials,
also tuning and regulating tools are given special attention.
Hammacher, Schlemmer & Co.
Piano and Player Hardware, Felts and Tools
New York Since 1848
4th Ave. at 13th St-

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