Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
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Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Gill the Piano »
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I rather like them!tuna wrote:I think the 'topic' piano is also related to the beast of Shannon.
I did tune a Lindner grand last year, but fortunately, it had a Schwander roller action with wooden keyboard.
Mind you, it only had one leg! A central pedestal leg type thing.
They remind me of those little Airfix plane kits that stood on a plastic stand! Build quality not as good though.
Mind you they are fine pianos with the wooden keys( ducks behind steel shutters and dons stab-proof kevlar)
Lindners were the most forward looking and innovative pianos of the late 20th. miles in front of anything else and were the only advance in piano design and construction since Erard's double repetition action in 1857 ( Hope I don't get a Fatwa).
Unfortunately, the materials were largely crap but the idea was fantastic and however much people moan, they were the only technician -friendly concept ever.Space the hammers- two seconds with a wide screw driver. Level the keys? turn a screw under. If some of the more pompous makers were not to snooty to take tips, they could learn much from the late, largely unlamented Lindners.
Anybody got one for sale?
No thanks.
vernon( aged 97
Broadly speaking you are correct..... Except the materials technology lagged thirty years behind the concept. I daresay it would work with today's plastics. The reverse thread wrestpins and slot-in micro wrestplank were poor ideas though.vernon wrote: Lindners were the most forward looking and innovative pianos of the late 20th. miles in front of anything else and were the only advance in piano design and construction since Erard's double repetition action in 1857
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Post by Gill the Piano »
I have to say that I went to tune a piano, and when I opened the top, I was nearly thrown backwards by the blast of hot air; not only had they put it directly in front of the radiator, but the rad was on full throttle. However, not only was it NOT outrageously flat or out of tune, it stayed in tune under the same conditions for the year after that. They moved, fortunately, so I never had to mend keys with blu-tack or any of the other ad hoc repairs which make tuning Lindners such a joy...
Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Gill the Piano »
Arlington wrote:. When I opened the top lid and started to dismantle, I felt as though I might have seen "something like this" before, and if I did, it would have been a very long time ago, in the puberty phase, no, infancy or even embryonic, to be more precise, of my professional life.
You might just have dreamt about it after a heavy cheese supper...
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Barrie Heaton »
Don't you mean a nightmareGill the Piano wrote:Arlington wrote:. When I opened the top lid and started to dismantle, I felt as though I might have seen "something like this" before, and if I did, it would have been a very long time ago, in the puberty phase, no, infancy or even embryonic, to be more precise, of my professional life.
You might just have dreamt about it after a heavy cheese supper...
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Gill the Piano »
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Barrie Heaton »
NastyGill the Piano wrote:That's the one...being chased by a Lindner then realising you're running towards an Eavestaff mini...
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
You can just raise the coffin lid enough to tune it. There is a broken jack b flat that cannot be accessed without a builder. She just says " I just avoid b flat when I'm teaching".
Job done.
Any fool can make a piano-- it needs a tuner to put the music in it
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Colin Nicholson »
Colin Nicholson Dip. Mus. CMIT CLCM PTLLS
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Gill the Piano »
Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
I remember those times when our family was living in a cardboard box on the M1
Any fool can make a piano-- it needs a tuner to put the music in it
www.lochnesspianos.co.uk
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Gill the Piano »
Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Any fool can make a piano-- it needs a tuner to put the music in it
www.lochnesspianos.co.uk
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Colin Nicholson »
Colin Nicholson Dip. Mus. CMIT CLCM PTLLS
Piano tuning & repairs. Full UK restoration service
http://www.aatuners.com
Tuition ~ Accompaniment ~ Weddings
http://www.pianotime1964.com
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Gill the Piano »
Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Any fool can make a piano-- it needs a tuner to put the music in it
www.lochnesspianos.co.uk
Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
By the way, does anyone here have replacement parts for the Mahler/Lindner piano? I have a hammer flange (or whatever that plastic thing is) that's broken, and a spring or two that's missing
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Barrie Heaton »
Barrie
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Barrie Heaton »
Arlington wrote:Hahahah. Thanks for the response
Go to quick links "piano Parts" and there is a link to Vernons website where you can buy the bits you need
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Again I say, thanks, BarrieBarrie Heaton wrote:Arlington wrote:Hahahah. Thanks for the response
Go to quick links "piano Parts" and there is a link to Vernons website where you can buy the bits you need
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by timthetune »
I remember reading somewhere, not long ago,about a French guy with an engineering business, who rebuilt a Lindner using newly machined parts that he manufactured to replace the ones that regularly used to break.....
Here is the link https://alainfelixdenis.wordpress.com/category/musique/
Tim
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Gill the Piano »
So the pianos could be all right but the materials let them down.
Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
When they came out in the 70s they incorporated so many innovations that the conservative piano industry couldn't cope
First they came "flat packed" years before Ikea, with the keyboard folded down and the whole lot in a stout cardboard box.
They were cheap.
Had a welded steel frame.
Every component was interchangeable except the dampers and hammers obviously.
The action parts were not screwed but just clipped onto rails that allowed instant adjustment with the side of a screw driver..
Hammers,dampers were numbered so you just ordered a replacement if needed.
All the keys were identical in two parts ,front and back that was hinged so to replace a key you just turned it to the required angle and glued it.No bushings.
Completely tuner friendly- Key level-- lost motion
Unfortunately. the key springs proved unreliable and they soon reverted back to wooden bushed keys.(Mahlers)
Then they moved to Ireland and went broke.
Had they prospered with the new materials we have now I feel they would be the leaders.
I can't understand why none of the Big Boys have not incorporated some of their excellent ideas. Dented egos?
Any fool can make a piano-- it needs a tuner to put the music in it
www.lochnesspianos.co.uk
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Colin Nicholson »
1. 2 X crocodile jaw looking hammer flanges (springs OK)
2. A few set-off screws & plastic dollies (most have been unscrewed)
3. Nearly a full set of hammer heads (just sawn them off the shanks)
Don't know what happened to the few string type/ snap-on bridle tapes I had.... gutted!
Burnt the rest.....
Colin Nicholson Dip. Mus. CMIT CLCM PTLLS
Piano tuning & repairs. Full UK restoration service
http://www.aatuners.com
Tuition ~ Accompaniment ~ Weddings
http://www.pianotime1964.com
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Re: Mahler; Lindner in disguise?
Post by Barrie Heaton »
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