Yamaha G2??
General discussion about piano makes, problems with pianos, or just seeking advice.
Moderators: Feg, Gill the Piano, Melodytune
Yamaha G2??
I am buying my first piano, although i have played on others over the years. I have narrowed it down to either a second hand Yamaha U3, a new Kawai K2, or the front runner, a 1980's Yamaha G2, which i can get for about $USD5,000 from a dealer, re polished in Ebony.
Please help!! I am looking for the best sound/quality as weel as investment.
Thanks (BTW the Piano will live in Auckland NZ)
Please help!! I am looking for the best sound/quality as weel as investment.
Thanks (BTW the Piano will live in Auckland NZ)
The G2. Especially if the serial number is higher than 4 million. I'm assuming that these are grey imports recently imported as second-hand from Japan?
A bit concerned about the 're-polished' bit, which implies that it may have had a hard life.
Can you get a local tuner/technician to check it over for you?
A bit concerned about the 're-polished' bit, which implies that it may have had a hard life.
Can you get a local tuner/technician to check it over for you?
Thanks for that, yeah the repolishing is beacause the case is a gold walnut finsh but i want it redone in black, is this a good idea? The shop is the largest in New Zealand and has techs/polishers etc in-house.
BTW the U3 is as new is 1500 cheaper. I am just checking on serial numbers now.
The G2 was owned by a music school and has a service history
BTW the U3 is as new is 1500 cheaper. I am just checking on serial numbers now.
The G2 was owned by a music school and has a service history
A colour change on a piano is not going to help resale values.
Unless you're really going to hang on to it, or the colour change will be completely undetectable, I'd keep it in walnut, especially since it sounds like a NZ market piano rather than a grey import. Keep it original, you'll get to like the walnut in time. Possibly .
An ex-school piano is going to be a high miler! Have you seen it in pre-restored condition? Is it really tatty? If so, I'd avoid.
Unless you're really going to hang on to it, or the colour change will be completely undetectable, I'd keep it in walnut, especially since it sounds like a NZ market piano rather than a grey import. Keep it original, you'll get to like the walnut in time. Possibly .
An ex-school piano is going to be a high miler! Have you seen it in pre-restored condition? Is it really tatty? If so, I'd avoid.
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