"They all usually have lacquer in them now". Nope, not true. Abel, Renner, Imadegawa, Ronsen and Yamaha (this covers most major manufacturers of hammers) all come out of the box with *no* lacquer in them. New York Steinway is the only company that consistently uses lacquer. A few other companies will use a tiny bit of lacquer in the high treble or low bass, but only if it's needed to brighten up a particular piano a bit. Please be careful to get the facts correct.
This has been flagged as spam show
Hi! Would you have a look at my squeaky, heavy played piano action?
I have a video clip of it on my page.
ronnieericsson 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Hi! Would you have a look at my squeaky, heavy played piano action?
I have a video clip of it on my page.
ronnieericsson 1 year ago
"They all usually have lacquer in them now". Nope, not true. Abel, Renner, Imadegawa, Ronsen and Yamaha (this covers most major manufacturers of hammers) all come out of the box with *no* lacquer in them. New York Steinway is the only company that consistently uses lacquer. A few other companies will use a tiny bit of lacquer in the high treble or low bass, but only if it's needed to brighten up a particular piano a bit. Please be careful to get the facts correct.
nelsontt2001 4 years ago
Thank you very much for the feedback. I would like to use your comment in the description please as a correction. Would that be ok with you? Thanks!
polarbear60 4 years ago
Yes, that's not a problem at all. Thanks for asking! Cheers!
nelsontt2001 4 years ago
Very informative series. Thank you for posting. Really shows the expertise of a good piano tuner and the benefits to hiring one.
ADAMundo 4 years ago