Music Trade Review

Issue: 1929 Vol. 88 N. 27

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade
Review
OCTOBER, 1929
here PIANOS are kept from
getting into the RUT! _
1 H HE business of building fine pianos
is not, as some may imagine, a cut-and-
dried, moving platform, factory job. Some
of America's best brains are constantly at
work with highly developed scientific
apparatus, ever seeking to improve this
greatest of all musical instruments. The
picture at the left shows a part of the
research laboratories of the American
Piano Company, in New York City.
Below you may see some of the inge-
nious devices which the laboratory equip-
ment includes.
The Chronograph—Microscope of the Ear
The Piano Touch Analyzer
What the ordinary microscope does for the eye,
the CHRONOGRAPH does for the ear. i oo times
more sensitive than the keenest human hearing,
it is used to determine hammer velocity, to make
such fine measurements as the time required for an
Ampico Valve to travel from its upper to its lower
seat—and to measure other intervals of less than
the i /ioooth part of a second. The CHRONO-
GRAPH makes it possible to achieve finer degrees
of piano tone than could be reached without it.
This device records exactly what takes place in
the action when you depress the piano key fts
3 /8" downward stroke. It shows on a graph; the
increasing resistance as damper, jack, repetition
lever and knuckle are successively encountered.
Only with the help of such scientifically accu-
rate record is it possible to overcome needless
resistance, so that the player's hands may not
be unduly tired.
1 HIS scientific work, carried on quietly but
persistently, month after month, year after year, has made
possible the smoother working actions, finer tone and more
enduring quality that characterize the pianos named below.
AMERICAN
PIANO
Making Movies of the Tone of Middle C.
. . . and Testing the Piano Before It's Built
The Oscillograph, on which the observer's hand
rests, consists of a prism with four mirror sides,
revolved swiftly by an electric motor and wired to
the microphone seen on the observer's left. A note
is struck on the piano. In the revolving mirrors
appears a sharply waving line . . . wide . . . then
narrowing as the sound diminishes and dies. That
line shows the eye what the ear is hearing. It may
be photographed, and by mathematical and graphic
processes its complicated curves can be analyzed and
reduced to their elements. The Oscillograph makes
it possible to study tone quality, learn what it con-
sists of, and how it may be improved.
In the foreground is the Piano Unit Tester, with
which it is simple to try out sounding boards of
any size or shape, strings of any length or gauge
— and any other departures from time-tried prec-
edent, and learn exactly what may be expected from
them when built into the piano.
COMPANY
MASON 8c HAMLIN, KNABE, CHICKERING, J. Bi C. FISCHER, MARSHALL & WENDELL, HAINES BROS. —AND THE AMPICO
^>84
F I F T H
A V E N U E
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N E W Y O R K
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
OCTOBER, 1929
The Public has gone EDISON
The
new Edison
uncanny
speed
and precision
ing in distant
telegraph,
Light-O-Matic
stations
air mail,
Radio
is a sensation!
of Light-O-Matic
as c l e a r l y
Edison
Tuning — they
and easily
dealers
People
as l o c a l s .
are reordering
marvel at the
thrill
By
at
bring-
telephone,
as never
before.
It takes an unusual radio to make a
making that sensation. Follow the public
sensation today—and
and let the now Edison
lived up to the qreat
'
°
name on its panel by
the Edison has
^
_,,**—•
^ 0 * ^
TRADE MARK
X^fcP
^ C\ PS
>
Radio
Light-O-Matic
make
this
your greatest season.
ORANGE, N. J.
EDISON DISTRIBUTING CORPORATION
ATLANTA, 155 So. Forsyth St. . . . BOSTON, Statler Bldg. . . . CHICAGO, 3130 So. Michigan Ave. . . . DALLAS, Santa Fe Bldg
DENVER, 1636 Lawrence St. . . . KANSAS
CITY, 1215 McGee St. . . . MINNEAPOLIS, 608 First Ave., N. . . . NEW ORLEANS, 128 Chartres St. . . . ORANGE, N. J., . . . PITTSBURGH, 909 Penn Ave
RICHMOND,
1204 East Main St. . . . SAN FRANCISCO, 1267 Mission St. . . . SEATTLE, Volker Bldg.
*
*
*
BINGHAMTON, Alliance Motor Corp... .BUFFALO, Alliance Motor Corp., 1460 Main Sf. ...CINCINNATI, Edi-Radio Mart, 622 Broadway Ave... .CLEVELAND, B.W. Smith, Inc.,
2019 Euclid Ave....DETROIT, E. A. Bowman, Inc., 5115 John R. St....DUBUQUE, Renier Bros.... LOS ANGELES, H. R. Curfiss Co., 727 Venice Blvd.. ..NEW YORK, Blackman Distrib-
uting Co., 28 W. 23rd St
OGDEN, Proudfit Sporting Goods Co., 2327 Grant Ave
PHILADELPHIA, Girard Phonograph Co., Broad & Wallace Sts
ROCHESTER, Alliance Motor
Corp., 727 Main St., [cst.. .SAGINAW, Morley Bros
ST. LOUIS, Silverstone Music and Radio Co., 412 N. lath St
SYRACUSE, Alliance Motor Corp., 1045 South Salina St.
The Music Trade Review. Published Monthly by Federated Business Publications, Inc., 420 Lexington Avenue, New York. Single copies, 20 cents; $2.00 per year. Vol. 88. No. '27.
Entered as second-class matter September 10, 1892, at the Post Office at Mew York, N. Y., under the act of Congress of March 3, 1879.

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