Baffling
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Baffling
A weird thing happened this week; the D-natural above the B (i.e. second D above MC) started buzzing. It sounded very much like a sympathetic buzz from a piece of furniture or like the noise you get when a bulb filament is vibrating but it isn't this because:
1) We took the piano out the hall and the buzz was still there. I asked a couple of other people to verify that I wasn't imagining it!
2) Absolutely every last screw, hammer, flange-whippet-bush-banana inside that frickin' piano was recently checked for tightness. It's nothing to do with the lock, music tray, lid or any of that. The action was taken out and checked and the piano was also regulated and voiced. Believe me, we have made a lOT of effort over this one!
Another weird ( ) thing is that the buzzing usually stops of its own accord after a while, and weirder still, it then somestimes returns but on the next-door notes of C-sharp or C-natural. Does anyone have an idea of what the rubber buggery might be causing this? It's not something that prevents the piano being used, but when you know it's there you just wait for it to start every time the thing is played. It is driving me just a little around the bend
Surely SOMETHING is causing it?
Solon (c. 630 - c. 500 B.C.), Greek Statesman and Reformer
Re: Baffling
Thanks pianomate - that's def worth a try. I'll ask our science department if they have one.an ultrasonic detector
Solon (c. 630 - c. 500 B.C.), Greek Statesman and Reformer
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Re: Baffling
Post by Barrie Heaton »
Sweep the sound board take interest in the areas under the frame
Barrie
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Re: Baffling
Barrie's suggestion sounds good-- quite recently we had a Schimmel with an elusive buzz which finally turned out to be a drumstick under the frame, just sticking but also moving around occasionally when the weather was right.
Also had a broken bridge pin which proved to be the buzzer in another piano.Half of it just pulled out.How it broke heavens knows.
Let us all know if/when you find it.
Obviously you've done all the uusual things from your report
Any fool can make a piano-- it needs a tuner to put the music in it
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Re: Baffling
I was sitting playing with the lid up, as you do, and the C sharp above middle C started buzzing. The buzzing sound sounded like it was coming from somewhere around the second octave below middle C. Couldn;t see anything untoward, and the naughty note didn't do the buzz when I damped to one string in three.
I was about to set fire to said piano, when I put the lid down. The buzz stopped. I put the lid up again and still no buzz....it hasn't come back (touch wood).
Maybe it was the lock, after all then, as Barry suggests?
Re: Baffling
My C3 at home does exactly the same on the same notes! I find that gently pushing the lid away from me a little makes it stop, or, if that doesn't work I stack some books on the (closed) lid.I was about to set fire to said piano, when I put the lid down. The buzz stopped. I put the lid up again and still no buzz....it hasn't come back (touch wood).
The buzz on the C7 defeats me; it's the fact that it comes and goes during the same playing session and also that it moves around the notes B-C-C#-D above MC at random. The piano has been gone through with a fine tooth comb and no explanation has been found. I'd love to know what it is and then KILL IT
Solon (c. 630 - c. 500 B.C.), Greek Statesman and Reformer
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Re: Baffling
Post by Bill Kibby »
http://pianohistory.info
Email via my website.
If you find old references or links on this site to pianogen.org, they should refer to pianohistory.info
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Re: Baffling
Post by Gill the Piano »
Re: Baffling
Thanks for the tip, Gill; I must admit I haven't got as far as the balls yet.have you checked the pins in the hinges are pushed right in? Particularly if they've got those little balls on the end
Solon (c. 630 - c. 500 B.C.), Greek Statesman and Reformer
Re: Baffling
Re: Baffling
Solon (c. 630 - c. 500 B.C.), Greek Statesman and Reformer
Re: Baffling
With a comment like that you should be castorgated............Openwood wrote:.........I'm intrigued by the castor, oil certainly investigate. Geddit?
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Re: Baffling
Post by Gill the Piano »
As I posted that, I thought 'Shall I add something to let them know I know where their minds are?'Openwood wrote:
Thanks for the tip, Gill; I must admit I haven't got as far as the balls yet.
Then I thought, 'No, I'll give them the benefit of the doubt.'
HAH!
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Re: Baffling
Post by Barrie Heaton »
Openwood wrote:Thanks for all your advice. I'm intrigued by the castor, oil certainly investigate. Geddit?
Hmm if you find that one of the legs of a 3 legged grand is off the ground I would call NASA they would be very interested
Barrie
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Re: Baffling
Post by chrisvenables »
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Re: Baffling
Post by Barrie Heaton »
capo bleed more common on Steinway and Schimmel than Yamaha I have only seen it on a few Yamaha's but they were C7 and concert never seen it on a C3 but... possible. He will notice a different sound of he mutes off just one note he would get a better balance if he mutes the who section off with a rolled up clean cloth.chrisvenables wrote:Many pianists complain about this distinctly audible harmonic /tone change on those first 3 or 4 notes particularly when played hard and careful toning of the hammers is crucial to try and obtain a nice tonal balance as you go up the scale. You can test the degree of harmonic by putting a gloved finger(so as not to tarnish the wire) on the three strings of that front duplex section (before the capo bar) that make up note 51,your offending B. Play it hard - the note will sound incredibly dull - is there still a buzz? Then play it again without muting it to hear the harmonic 'zing'. (On your C3 the first note in the capo section should be note 55, Eflat) If there's no longer a buzz when in muted duplex mode, you could ask your tuner to voice the offending notes which usually does the trick.
Tell that to the Steinway tuners standard practise for them, more bits of felt stuck in the capo than bits of paper on a sailor face who has been shaving in a storm.chrisvenables wrote: On some really bad cases I've seen some tuners even mute off one or two of the strings in the front duplex, but it's not the done thing!
Barrie,
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Re: Baffling
The learned and experience -based information in this thread should be collated by someone more IT- competent than I for use in the Trade, especially younger tuners, if there are any.
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: Baffling
Post by chrisvenables »
What I was trying to suggest to Openwood was that if he temporarily mutes off the front duplex on the offending note no.51 and the buzz disappears, then careful toning of the hammers in that area could cure it and leave the piano nicely balanced. I wouldn't suggest muting off the whole duplex - the treble would sound far too dull. My reply was with reference to the C7 in the school, as mentioned at the start of Openwood's post. I mentioned the C3 which they also have only because they also had a similar problem with that piano slightly higher up the scale, and, again, maybe coincidentally, around the start of the front duplex which starts on note 55 on the C3. I've seen hundreds of Yamaha grands and they all have a degree of 'zing' at the start of the duplex - usually it enhances the tone and increases the dynamic range - unfortunately you get the odd piano where there's too much zing and toning usually does the trick. Of course, particularly in a school, in time as the hammers harden up, the harmonic will return, so annual toning and regulating, just like servicing your car, is vital.Barrie Heaton wrote -[capo bleed more common on Steinway and Schimmel than Yamaha I have only seen it on a few Yamaha's but they were C7 and concert never seen it on a C3 but... possible. He will notice a different sound of he mutes off just one note he would get a better balance if he mutes the who section off with a rolled up clean cloth.
Openwood - when you're trying to locate the buzz, get two people with you to try and locate the area whilst you're playing the offending note. If you've any queries you can always phone me - 01425 476644.
Re: Baffling
Solon (c. 630 - c. 500 B.C.), Greek Statesman and Reformer
Re: Baffling
Chris, many thanks for the detailed suggestions; I'm going to ask my tuner to work through them with me and we'll see what happens. It does sound very much like the scenario you describe in the quote above - the notes are fine up to mf but there's a definite change in tone above that dynamic level.Many pianists complain about this distinctly audible harmonic /tone change on those first 3 or 4 notes particularly when played hard
Solon (c. 630 - c. 500 B.C.), Greek Statesman and Reformer
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Re: Baffling
Post by Barrie Heaton »
I know that it was a temp so was mine as I find that is normally more than just a few notes and the rolled up cloth on the whole duplex demonstrates the clarity that should be there which is not present on some tiered Yamaha pianoschrisvenables wrote:What I was trying to suggest to Openwood was that if he temporarily mutes off the front duplex on the offending note no.51 and the buzz disappears, then careful toning of the hammers in that area could cure it and leave the piano nicely balanced. I wouldn't suggest muting off the whole duplex - the treble would sound far too dull.Barrie Heaton wrote -[capo bleed more common on Steinway and Schimmel than Yamaha I have only seen it on a few Yamaha's but they were C7 and concert never seen it on a C3 but... possible. He will notice a different sound of he mutes off just one note he would get a better balance if he mutes the who section off with a rolled up clean cloth.
by coincidence I have done a C7 this week in a school that has very bad treble - this piano is an import and has been reface a few time but not very well. that has not helped, the strings are showing falseness which again is not helping, but the piano has been cooked and the DB was very shallow.
The pianos is in the late 60 pos 70s needs new hammers and a restring which they can't afford yet. Have you tried cold press Wurzen/Weickert felt on a Yamaha C7 they are jumping up and down about it in Germany.
Barrie,
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Re: Baffling
What's DB?
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: Baffling
Post by Barrie Heaton »
Sorry downbearingvernon wrote:Barrie
What's DB?
on this piano is was close to negative which as you know is not uncommon on old pianos and you can have the string going down to the bridge and still have good sustain, but with Capo scaling its a pain
now with Schimmel pianos you take out the half moon bar and pack it up Schimmel recommend 5mm thick card cut to size it works well but I found this to be a pain as it makes the tuning very unstable for months I now use a Coke can cut into strips and glue it to the under side of the half moon one strip works well and not compression so just a few tunings and all is well with the world.
Barrie,
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Re: Baffling
Teaching the world to string in perfect harmonyI now use a Coke can cut into strips
Solon (c. 630 - c. 500 B.C.), Greek Statesman and Reformer
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Re: Baffling
Post by chrisvenables »
Haven't tried them Barrie - I'd be interested to hear how those hammers sound, although as a Yamaha dealer I'm really obliged to use Yamaha components. Should this really be posted in tuner's section so as not to confuse readers?
Re: Baffling
I tried muting the strings on the front duplex scale from notes 51-54 (B-D#) and there was certainly a reduction in the 'zing' (Chris V's description - 'zing' describes the sound much better than my 'buzz'). It didn't remove the zing altogether but it did muffle it (along with the rest of the sound, obviously) and it also shortened the duration of the zing.Maybe it's just a coincidence, but the offending note on your Yamaha C7, B above mid C is the very first note on the capo bar section -So both ends of the duplex scale come into effect - the capo bar (front part) of the duplex creates a very noticeable harmonic not heard on notes lower down the scale, where the traditionally non speaking section of strings from tuning pin to the agraffes (studs)are muted by felt. Many pianists complain about this distinctly audible harmonic /tone change on those first 3 or 4 notes particularly when played hard and careful toning of the hammers is crucial to try and obtain a nice tonal balance as you go up the scale. You can test the degree of harmonic by putting a gloved finger(so as not to tarnish the wire) on the three strings of that front duplex section (before the capo bar) that make up note 51,your offending B. Play it hard - the note will sound incredibly dull - is there still a buzz? Then play it again without muting it to hear the harmonic 'zing'.
I'm wondering if there may be two separate issues here. The intermittent zings on C, D and D# seem to be connected to the duplex scale and its harmonics, as Chris suggested, but the B is still behaving oddly in a different way. For example, one of the pieces I'm playing at the mo is Haydn's piano sonata in Eb (52). In one of the bars of the slow movement it's necessary to play the B repeatedly and quickly; when I do this the tone of the B becomes very nasty and 'twangy'. This doesn't happen on the other, adjacent 'zingy' notes. The sustain pedal is being used at this point - the nasty twang doesn't seem to appear unless the sustain pedal is used.
Any ideas what this could be?
Solon (c. 630 - c. 500 B.C.), Greek Statesman and Reformer
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Re: Baffling
Post by chrisvenables »
(A 'fault' with all pianos -all notes except the very top will 'twang' to a degree if played hard enough and loud enough with the sustain pedal on, as the strings are being struck again whilst they are still moving)
Re: Baffling
The C7 isn't old - 2005, or thereabouts. Serial number 6771188.How old is the piano and are the hammer heads fairly worn or grooved?
It was voiced in January and the zings appeared to have gone away, only to return a couple of weeks later.
The piano as a whole sounds fantastic, which makes these imperfection seven more grating. It takes a lot of pleasure out of playing because I tense-up whenever I play these notes - which is a lot of the time, given where they are on the keyboard.
I'm getting someone across next week to 'overhaul' my C3 at home (it's been under wraps since December due to moving house) and I'll ask them to look at the C7 too. Mind you, a whole bunch of people have looked at the bloody thing already and nobody seems able to sort it out
Solon (c. 630 - c. 500 B.C.), Greek Statesman and Reformer
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Re: Baffling
Post by chrisvenables »
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Re: Baffling
Post by Barrie Heaton »
On newish pianos which get heavy use the hammer can get very hard just in the little grove if fact it can just be a line not a grove. Some tuners just scratch the grove which will remove the zig for a short period, the 2mm single needle in the nose will last a lot longer and stem even longer
if you play form the shoulders and if the school piano is hammered as well, toning is going to be a regular item
I have clients who need the piano voiced on each visit
Barrie,
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Re: Baffling
Solon (c. 630 - c. 500 B.C.), Greek Statesman and Reformer
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Re: Baffling
Post by Barrie Heaton »
A drop of glue on the duplex string will alter the pitch that also works well, and if you use translucence glue you can hardly see it and you don't lose power like you do with mutingOpenwood wrote:I got a tech over from the UK mainland to look at the zings; in the end he muted the middle duplex string on each note and the problem is FINALLY solved. It may not be the most elegant solution but it's fixed something that's been driving me up the wall since 2005 so I'm lovin' it.
I seen a long time ago the old lead fishing weights were good as you can move them and tune the string in
Barrie,
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