Anonymous wrote:I’d start with regulating the action (adjusting the distance between the strings and the hammers), which is a prerequisite for the further step of regulating the voicing (reshaping and softening the felt on the hammers). If the action regulation fixes the problem you won’t have to spend the extra money on the voicing regulation.
Anonymous wrote:Make sure the relative humidity is 40-50%
Anonymous wrote:I don't think there's anything obvious on it that shouldn't be. I noticed the buzzy/brassier tone in the lower octaves after the tuning. I think it's gotten maybe a bit better but I still feel that the left side is jazzier/brassier/louder than before the tuning. The piano has also since been moved to another house, so it's unlikely to be something like debris resting on it. Could the string be somehow, I don't know... adjust to be looser than before the tuning?
Thanks for the poster who mentioned "action," I think that vocabulary will help me. I don't want to do anything drastic or very expensive. But I would like to fix that left side. And if possible, would like to keys to have a lighter touch.
Anonymous wrote:Have you looked inside? I've always found Yamahas way too ringy and hard to play quietly, so maybe the tuner just reset to this original sound? The buzz is not normal - something wasn't done right.
Anonymous wrote:Have you looked inside? I've always found Yamahas way too ringy and hard to play quietly, so maybe the tuner just reset to this original sound? The buzz is not normal - something wasn't done right.