Piano Tuning & Piano Repair since 1959 for Atlanta and Atlantans

  Atlanta Piano Tuner .com
  
Master Piano Repair Craftsman/ Piano Service for Metro Atlanta/ Expert Piano Tuner
 

Atlanta Piano Tuning and Piano Repair since 1959          Piano  Tuning,  Piano Service  and  Piano Repair  for  Atlanta  and  Atlantans  by Native Atlantans           Don't be fooled by copycats !!     Master  Piano  Tuner- Technicians           Antique Piano Tuning for Atlanta and Surrounding Counties         ~Specialties~     Contemporary  Piano  Tuning  and  Piano  Service     Minor  Repair  to  Major  Piano  Rebuilding     Professional  Piano  Refinishing      Restoration ~      Pump  Organs     Player Piano Specialists     Harpsichords     Square  Grand  Pianos     Bird- Cage  Upright  Pianos     Restoration  Source  for  Continental  USA !    Interested in Investing?     Looking for work opportuniites?     Contact us, we'd love to see a resume' or discuss potentialities      Your  #1  Source  for  Piano  Tuning  and  Expert  Piano  Repair  in  Atlanta,  the  Metro  Area,  and  North  Georgia !!

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PIANO SERVICE INFORMATION


Piano Tuning  Piano Repair  Piano Rebuilding/Refinishing   Piano Consulting  Moving

Check out these links...
if you still have questions, try the Piano Frequently Asked Questions Page.  If you don't see
 your question answered there, try the contact page, and email or call with your question. 
We put the 'service' in piano service.

We Service every type of acoustic piano!
Here are some of the top brands we've repaired!

 
If it's acoustic, we have probably repaired it!
 
Contact us and see!!

     We provide excellent Piano Tuning Cost
     for all of the Metro Atlanta Area:

  • Steinway & Sons

  • Baldwin

  • Mason & Hamlin

  • Chickering

  • Knabe

  • Sohmer

  • Stieff

  • Ivers & Pond

  • Kimball

  • Kohler & Campbell

  • Wurlitzer

  • Henry F. Miller

  • Cable

  • Aeolian Family

  • Yamaha
  • Bechstein
  • Bosendorfer
  • Ibach
  • Petrof
  • Samick
  • Young Chang
  • Kawai
  • Schimmel
  • Weber
  • Welte-Mignon
  • Hyundai
  • Bluthner
  • Shumann

 

 

    

 

 

  • City of Atlanta
  • Cobb County
  • Fulton County
  • Gwinnett County
  • Dekalb County
  • Henry County
  • Rockdale County
  • Barrow County
  • Fayette County
  • All surrounding counties

      We travel free up to a 50 mile radius from
     downtown Atlanta, and we will travel any
     distance beyond the free radius at
     .60 cents/mile.

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

Piano Tuning

 

     Atlanta Piano Tuner offers expert -ly trained master craftsmen with combined 35,000+  piano tunings experience.  Whether you are just beginning to play the piano, or are an accomplished pianist, Atlanta Piano Tuner guarantees your satisfaction, period. 

     We focus on extending ultimate service, coupled with an expert eye for VALUE when it comes to piano tuning.  We offer several programs from simple fee one time service, to extended warranties that cover the entire piano from the action, to the strings, plate, soundboard, regulations, and damper and pedal trap-work adjustment.  So, if you are simply seeking a single service or you would appreciate total care for you piano,  Atlanta Piano Tuner is your answer.

     Atlanta Piano Tuner tunes pianos with our primary concern being music.  In our opinion piano tuning cost and accuracy is where the rubber meets the road when a player sits down to play a piano we have tuned.  If the piano tuning is done well, then the individual's spirit will be ministered to as they play.

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Piano Repair

     Piano Repair is a phrase that steps into a range of applications of piano service:

      Even though piano tuning is a type of repair, typically when piano repair is requested it pertains more to the mechanisms in the piano (keys, key bed, the action with 100's of moving parts, and the pedal trap-work), or the case /facade of the piano and the occasional dents and dings to the finish or exterior.

     Utilize our free phone consultation to allow us to assist you with your decision making process when you are determining what your piano needs are and what service we can offer.  With our extensive experience in repairing antique/vintage pianos, if we can't repair your piano, it can't be repaired.  Many times there are 'tricks' that can be employed to your benefit if you don't want to rebuild a piano that can be applied to keep the mechanism operational until refurbishment or rebuilding is possible.  The important thing to remember here is not to allow a broken part to damage another component.  Many expensive repairs can be avoided with regularly scheduled maintenance not only in regard to piano tuning but to your piano's valuable mechanisms as well.

     When we repair a piano we are seeking to optimize the feel and sound of the piano to further the cause of music.  Piano repair then becomes something of a mission.  This is why we take piano repair seriously.

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Piano Rebuilding

 

     Piano rebuilding is something that we at AtlantaPianoTuner truly love about being in the piano business.  We derive a strong sense of accomplishment from the restoration of a quality vintage piano.  Old, dark, forbidding surfaces melt away revealing rich, warm tones of burl walnut, rosewood, mahogany,  tiger oak, maple, and many other rare woods.  Crusty, sluggish, non-repeating mechanisms spring to a life remembered decades ago when your piano was new.  Your piano can return to its old glory with our fastidious care.  Give your piano the opportunity to show its resiliency, and its tribute to the craftsmen of old who took extreme pride in their craft.  We strive to the same code and welcome the opportunity to revive your piano rebuilding it.

     Piano rebuilding is when we take your piano in to our piano repair shop, removing all worn components to replace or repair them. We bring your piano back to like new functionality, or as close as we can take your instrument to like new functionality. Piano rebuilding means just that...  piano REBUILDING.  

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Consulting

     When you have arrived at a point where you are pondering buying a piano, selling a piano, or just wanting to get an idea of what you have sitting in your living room,  AtlantaPianoTuner has the knowledge to educate, the desire to inform, and the integrity to provide you with the honest facts about your piano.  We can give you accurate value assessments that don't forget the economy, supply informed appraisals for insurance purposes, provide you with in-depth education in layman's terms, or just tell you how old your piano is.  The piano is a complex mechanism that requires a fairly extensive knowledge to know what you are seeing when you look at it.  We have that knowledge.

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Piano Moving

     Moving pianos is such a difficult task for the novice that it is well known that furniture movers typically avoid moving them when possible, and reluctantly when they can't avoid it.  There is a distinct science that we at AtlantaPianoTuner have invested years studying when it comes to piano moving.  Done properly, with the care that only a master technician can provide is your answer for having your piano moving done in a manner that will be care free for you the customer.  We love our trade. Piano moving, though difficult, is an aspect of piano service we take seriously and welcome the opportunity to show you how much we care for our customer's pianos.

 

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INDIRECT BLOW ACTION PIANO

SPINET PIANO

     Spinet pianos are most commonly characterized by their size.  They range in height 36" to around 42"  (give or take a few inches ).  In technical terminology they are also referred to as drop action pianos or more correctly indirect blow action pianos ( the piano key pulls or provides an indirect blow which pulls the action into motion rods we call in the industry - stickers).  They may be small in stature, but are complete pianos with complex escapement mechanism, piano key lengths ranging from just under one foot to over fourteen inches, an over-strung scale design for the piano wires,  and last but certainly not least well over fifteen tons of tension on the structure of that tiny musical instrument when the piano is tuned to A440.  The higher grade spinet pianos boast comparable tuning stability to larger piano designs, and no loss of sound resonance.  The downside characteristic of medium to low quality spinet pianos is resident dissonance in the piano wires ( particularly in the bass piano wires ).  Some also argue that because of the shorter piano key length, the dynamic range that makes expression possible in acoustic pianos is some what diminished in spinet pianos.

     In comparison to an electronic keyboard, there is none but that they both have ebonies and ivories.  By far, most teachers will recommend a spinet piano over an electronic keyboard if an individual's primary concern is a balance between budget and not compromising seeking an acoustic piano.  Because they are the smallest piano, they typically are the most affordable.  They also are a favorite choice for constricted living conditions, and for individuals who move frequently ( with some difficulty they can actually be carried ... most weigh around three to five hundred pounds.  Whereas larger pianos will be significantly over 500 lbs. and impossible to carry ).  Grade as a starter piano? 9.5 out of 10.

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DIRECT BLOW ACTION PIANOS

CONSOLE PIANO
 

     Console pianos are preferable to own over spinet pianos because they are the first class of piano that contains a direct blow action.  In layman's terminology, a direct blow action means greater feel ( control ) over the loud sounds and soft sounds a piano is literally named for.  Originally pianos were called 'piano-forte' which translated means 'soft-loud'. 

     Console pianos also have a piano wire ( string ) length that is anywhere from four inches to over a foot longer than spinet piano wire lengths.  This means more resonant sound, with longer sustaining tones. 

     Also along with the bigger structure comes more stability for all the weight that console pianos support.  A typical console piano will sustain somewhere just shy of twenty tons of tension distributed across 200+ piano wires at A440.

     There is a caution in regard to console pianos and some spinet pianos as well.  This is a very attractive, decorative leg that supports the front of the keyboard.  This 'leg' typically has almost no structural integrity.  Put simply it will crack and break away from the piano with an amazing amount of ease.  For this reason, when this piano is moved, great care should be taken to not allow this leg to receive side pressure from any angle.  Some times, if I assess the risk to the leg is great enough, I'll actually remove it before moving the piano.

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STUDIO/UPRIGHT PIANO

     Studio pianos and upright pianos are quite similar overall.  Both types of piano have direct blow actions.  This type of action has a piano key that extends under the action, so when the key is depressed it literally transfers a direct blow type of motion to the action of the piano.  The studio and upright piano types also have the longest key length of any vertical piano class.  These key lengths will range from over a foot long to just shy of twenty inches ( give or take a couple ).  This translates to the most controllable touch of any piano except grand pianos.

     These studio piano and upright piano types also have a much more stable frame and structure than any other vertical piano class, and the longest piano wire length.  A studio piano ranges around four feet high whereas an upright piano is around three to five inches taller.  More tuning stability, a more resonant musical instrument with longer sustaining musical tones, this is the preferable upright or vertical type of piano to own.  Also because of the stable frame, these types are usually seen in classrooms of various schools or other institutions such as churches.  They can be rolled around with some ease from room to room without the stability of the piano tuning being adversely affected.

     One may also find in the vintage upright pianos the only introduction of a sostenuto rail.  Rarely occurring in a few brands of antique pianos is a version of a rail operated from a pedal that permits an individual to play and sustain one set of notes without having to sustain the dampers from the rest of the piano's notes.

     Around the turn of the century literally thousands of piano companies world-wide were producing mass quantities of upright pianos.  The result in current times of this is large masses of upright pianos available at a fraction of their actual value simply because there are so many sitting around not being used.  For this reason upright pianos are also available as an excellent starter piano.  It is not at all unusual for an upright piano to be purchased for under one thousand dollars ( sometimes significantly less ).  Many times an upright piano can be obtained merely by going and picking it up... no easy feat!

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GRAND PIANO

 

     Grand Piano Tuning is one of life's extraordinary serendipities.  The inimitable grand piano is simply the standard of acoustic pianos.  The "repetition lever" in a grand piano's action sets it completely apart from every vertical piano ever made.  This lever catches a portion of the grand piano's action, enabling extremely fast repetition rates.  While this is not a 'make it or break it' scenario for most piano players, what will translate to every player's touch regardless of skill or expertise is that this is the most accurate reproduction of the pressure used to play a key. 

     Another feature of better quality grand pianos is the sostenuto pedal.  This pedal allows a piano player to hold down one set of keys, depress the sostenuto, then go ahead and play away on the rest of the keys  without worrying they will sound.  This is a feature that only a more accomplished pianist will appreciate.

     A grand piano is also the most aesthetically appealing piano.  Beauty in operation, beauty when it's sitting dormant in your room, this type of piano is my strong recommendation if an individual has the means to truly treat themselves to the best.

     When it comes to dynamic range (control of loud playing and soft playing), a grand piano having a key that is in some cases as much as a foot longer (or more) than some vertical piano gives even more control to the piano player. 

     One of the biggest negatives with grand pianos is they have a tendency to take over a room (unless the room is very large).

     Having been in the piano business for many years,  I've never seen grand piano prices lower.  This is an excellent opportunity for a purchaser.  I strongly recommend that any prospective piano shopper get at least a minimal education of what's available, then shop several different pianos before making a decision.

     I've said this before on this site, and I'll say it again.  There are many fine quality vertical pianos available that pass the test of the most discriminating touch.  Grand pianos are simply the best, and I mean to have nothing else inferred here.  The addition of a definition segment of piano types is answering a question posed many times over in a technician's travels.    

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SQUARE GRAND PIANO
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      Square Grand Pianos are the grandfathers of the modern piano.  I italicized modern because amazingly in this the era in human history of mechanization, electrification, industrialization, and overall unmatched in history changes to the way we live and the comforts that technological advance has brought us, the piano stands virtually alone made almost entirely the way they were one hundred years ago.

   The first pianos were a technological advance from harpsichords.  Harpsichords, while they were key board operated devices, were mostly characterized by their inability to produce a loud or soft tone.  The advance Bartolomeo Cristofori ( 1655-1731 ) introduced was this new device called initially piano - forte ( we've since shortened it down to just piano).  The ingenious introduction summed up into what we call an 'escapement mechanism'.  This mechanism pretty accurately reproduced the firm touch of a finger into a loud sound, and a light touch into a soft sound.  Whereas the harpsichord literally plucked the wire, this new escapement mechanism was able to strike the wire with varying force.

     The first ( what I'll call "primitive") pianos had pretty severe limitations to their longevity.  Leather wrapped hammers ( the portion of the mechanism that strikes the wire ) wore out within a few decades.  Leather hinges that supported the various moving parts cracked and split in an equally short period of time.  Long and gangly mechanical parts were either extremely difficult or simply impossible to regulate.  (Regulation or mechanical adjustments is one the advances where technology has had the most impact with pianos ).  Structure designs for the first pianos were too weak to support the amount of tension that the piano wires exerted, shortening yet once again the lifetime of the first primitive pianos.

     The next era ( general consensus calls this the Victorian era ) saw many improvements to piano design.  Leather hammers were replaced with felt padded hammers, and hinges evolved to the modern style of a pin ( originally brass ) inserted through a felt bushing.  Mechanisms that couldn't be adjusted fell into obsolescence replaced with new and numerous ingenious designs of components that could be regulated, or adjusted.  It is truly fascinating to watch the piano's history and to see how far engineering as a science has evolved as principles of nature were noticed, studied, and finally a science of some sort was developed.

     A few decades before the turn of the century, give or take a few years, we see the square grand piano lose prominence then gradually drop into obsolescence.  They are big beautiful pieces of furniture first, an interesting oddity that you can play a tune on second, and a serious musical instrument that can be used every day..... never.

 

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PUMP ORGAN

 

     Pump Organs still remain as an old favorite style of musical instrument, even though electronic organs have fallen severely off over the last few decades in their popularity.  These pump organs are beautiful furniture pieces typically, and working properly can be a lot of fun to play.  I'm certain that 150 years ago no one thought that the aerobic benefit to playing a pump organ would have significance, but if you own or have played one you know exactly what I mean.

     Pump organs utilize all pneumatic functions in their production of sound and vibrato.  Ingenious minds developed interesting additions like octave coupling ( when you play a note, the octave higher or lower plays simultaneously ).  And methods to reproduce a simile of  horns or woodwinds through the pump organ's reed system.  Uses of swells to increase volume, 'vox humana' to reproduce a vibrato sound, multitudinous (alot) ways to uniquely manufacture the stop panel mechanism, and an extraordinary attention to some of the most ornate cabinet styles you can get in any type of furniture, make these devices an almost must have for any antique collector to round out their collections.  Even during a period in American history where veneer was being used more and more to make furniture, pump organs, for some reason, seem to have stayed with solid wood ( mostly walnut ).

     If you go back to this country's foundational years, many churches didn't have a resident pastor. Most of the pastors back then were itinerate, and would load up their pump organ ( much easier to carry around than a piano, for sure ) and traverse around the countryside with their trusty pump organs providing music in the churches they served.  Does anyone out there have any relatives that were itinerate preachers during the formative years of this country?  I'd love to hear stories and will post them up on this site.

 

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  1. APT knows how frustrating shopping for you next piano purchase can be.
  2. You might spend exorbitant amounts of time trying to research what is available
  3.  in the market.
     "Thank God," you might say, " At least...
  4.  there are only a few dozen companies still making pianos"...
  5. Have you discovered yet  that there used to be about 10,000 companies...
  6.  who manufactured pianos and a lot of those pianos are still around ?
  7. So then you wonder whether a used/pre-owned piano might
  8. possibly be a better purchase than new...
  9. Maybe you exhaust days shopping new piano stores listening
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    to uninformed salesmen attempt to tell you why their piano brand is the the best...

  11. Newspapers/phone calls shopping for used pianos ...sound familiar?
  12. Always the big question...

 


  1. How do I KNOW if this is the best piano for the money I have to invest?
  2. Drum roll please...  We at Atlanta Piano Tuner may have just the answer for you.  We have invested a lifetime analyzing the various piano manufacturer's pianos (new and old/used), inspecting pianos for condition/playability/functionality, consulting on repair issues relating to pianos, tuning pianos, repairing/ moving/ refinishing... pianos.  We know the vintage brands of pianos and have intimate knowledge of what is available in the new piano market.
  3. We offer a three tier program for piano buyers that we hope will take away the frustration from the process of placing an instrument in your home.  We want you to enjoy all that music has to offer from an acoustic piano:
  4. Checklist-in-the-mail option $45

           An expert opinion backed with a printed checklist for your safety/security in the buying process.

  1. On- site inspection $150

    An on-site inspection/ evaluation of a piano you have personally selected.
     

    Retainer $500
  2. Retaining a Master piano tuner/technician to make your lifetime piano purchase for you.

 

  1. Used / Pre-owned piano certification:
  2. 1. Aesthetic/Appearance – Finish, veneer, and core wood condition is appraised for any scratches, dents or damage.
    • Condition of finish on case, lid (front and back), lid prop, fall-board, cheek blocks, key slip, legs, lyre, music shelf and song rack is inspected (grand piano) for scratches, dents or any other damage.
    • Veneer that is missing, split, cracked, separated or damaged is noted.
    • Typing of finish – Color (clear or painted), finish type (glossy, satin or flat) and rating of overall aesthetic is appraised
    • Core wood damage is detected and noted.
    • Serial number is located. Piano manufacturing date is verified.
  3. 2. Pin-block/tuning pins/wires – Checked thoroughly for adequate functionality (torque, etc.).  Tuning stability and current pitch (frequency) are recorded. Condition of the felts and “friction points” of the piano wires are noted for wear.
    • Typing of pin-block as to whether solid or laminate; whether hard rock maple or beech (if possible). 
    • Tuning pins (and bushings if present) are checked for condition and size.
    • Piano wires – checked for elasticity, rust, assessment as to whether they are original or replacements and visual inspection of all “friction points” (capo d’astro bar, bridge pins, pressure bar, hitch pins, aliquot bar and agraffes).  Related felts are inspected for moth damage, tears, separations from plate and other related general wear items.
  4. 3. Sound-board – Spruce planks, ribs and bridges are inspected.  Cracks, separations from ribs (with locations), down-bearing (regulation) and condition of bridge crown are all documented.
    • Main plank – Detection and location of cracks; severity noted with affect to sound of instrument; down-bearing; condition of sound-board’s finish.
    • Ribs – numbered and checked for separations from cracks (if present)
    • Bridges – checked for adhesion to sound-board; bridge crown checked for cracks/separations at bridge pins and assessment as to whether minor or major (diminished tone and tuning stability).
  5. 4. Structure – Keybed, support beams, rim and legs are thoroughly inspected for water damage and structural damage from stress.
    • Keybed checked for any signs of water damage and/or separations from structure.
    • Support beams – all connections checked for consequential separations, water damage and/or stress/wear.
    • Legs – Checked for stress cracks/wear or damage.
    • Rim – Checked for damage with particular interest given to area of lid hinges, at point of contact with sound-board and laminations (if laminate) checked for stress induced separations.

        5. Mechanical/moving parts – Action, keys, damper mechanism, and pedal trap-work

·        Grand Action – Inspection of action frame (main beam, masts w/ fastenings, let-off rail, and hammer rail and “bounce” rail) for “stripped” fastenings/tightness of screws and water damage.  Whippens, jacks, springs, schwander cords, repetition lever, hammer shanks, flanges, hammers, glue joints, felts, buckskins, buttons and other related parts are checked for adhesion, tightness, ease of movement, condition and wear, water damage, moth damage, regulation and stress.

·        Keys – Type of key top (ivory or plastic) and condition is noted.  Key alignment noted w/ attention to ease of movement; key frame (front, balance, back rail and attaching rails) is checked for tightness of screws and water damage.  Felts checked for moth damage, impaction and regulation. Front and balance rail pins checked for condition and functionality. Back check regulation and buckskin condition are noted for functionality.  Key “core” wood checked for water damage and regulation.

·        Damper mechanism – Blocks, felts, rods, lift rail, guide rail and damper lift blocks checked for condition and functionality

·        Pedal trap-work – Pedals, rods, trap-work, felts, hinges, springs and dowels are checked for condition and functionality.

6. Bench – checked for aesthetic appearance, tightness of glue joints and mechanical condition.

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