I have an 1865 Broadwood "short" drawing room grand (which at 7'10, beggars the question how long a "long" drawing room grand might be
![Shocked :shock:](./images/smilies/icon_eek.gif)
I can't really stretch to 10 grand at the moment, so was wondering about doing it myself.
I have done work on upright pianos, pianolas and reed organs in the past - I'm pretty confident about the boring repetitve stuff - like doing the same thing with little bits of felt a hundred times etc...
I have a copy of the famouse Reblitz book, and I would not presume to get a tuning any closer than "thereabouts" for a proper tuner to finish.
My question here is about soundboard crown, of which I hear a lot from restorers - a bit like the sucking of teeth that one gets from a plumber, when the wife asks about the state of the boiler
![Wink :wink:](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
Reblitz seems to suggest that the downbearing of the strings will cause the ribs underneath the soundboard to come away, that this is inevitable over time, and the only thing to do is remove the soundboard and glue it back together, involving lots of complicated supports.
But having had a look at said Broadwood, the ribs run parallel to the strings, which suggest that there cannot ever have been a crown (unless the soundboard itself varies in thickness?), and they seem pretty firmly stuck to the soundboard (though I haven't yet taken a torch to really be sure).
So, if there isn't supposed to be a "crown" on the soundboard, can I just carefully clean it (having restored a C16th oak floor by hand, I know all about cleaning lol), and leave well alone?
BTW, the piano is 95% complete - some of the fretwork on the candlestands is broken, but there's a local cabinet maker who will fix that, only one front of an ivory natural is missing (got one off ebay) and one hammer is gone (though it maybe inside). Strings i will have made to pattern, and time isn't an issue (well it is, I don't have a huge amount, but if it takes years, what the heck).
I know that I'll be howled down by techs who says that "jo public" should touch what it took them 40 years to learn, and the heritage brigade who will say that I may destroy some of England's heritage...but I can take it....
I think
![Confused :?](./images/smilies/icon_confused.gif)
The woodworm in the keys, now that's another story
![Rolling Eyes :roll:](./images/smilies/icon_rolleyes.gif)