|
Piano Care Tips
Have your piano tuned regularly. Twice a year minimum.
Ask your technician to do a minor "touch-up" regulation at each tuning. This
will prevent most instances of unnecessary wear and breakage.
Have a full regulation done every 2 to 5 years. You'd be surprised at how your
piano should have
sounded and responded to you
playing all these years.
Don't attempt any "home repairs" on your piano. Although it may appear easy to
fix yourself, an innocent mistake can be costly. Let a technician do it - they
have the right tools, replacement parts and expertise to do the job right the
first time.
Keep your piano away from heating registers, radiators, fireplaces and air
conditioning vents. Subjecting it to extreme fluctuations of temperature and
humidity levels can do major damage. Keeping a piano away from an outside wall
was probably necessary in poorly insulated older Victorian homes, but should not
be a problem these days. Avoid direct sunlight on your piano - it can damage and
fade the finish, or even create horrible tuning problems. Use curtains or
blinds.
Try and keep the temperature and humidity levels as consistent as possible in
the room where you have your piano. Using a temperature/humidity gauge
(hygrometer) can keep this in check. Seasonal swings in relative humidity are
the piano's greatest enemy. Swelling and shrinking of wooden parts affect tuning
and keyboard touch, while extreme swings can eventually cause wood to crack and
glue joints to fail. Pianos are happiest in a relative humidity level of 40 to
45 percent. If you don't have a central humidifier/dehumidifier, consider
getting a room humidifier for the winter, and a room dehumidifier or air
conditioner during the summer months. There's even such thing as a special piano
humidifier/dehumidifier that can be installed in your piano. Ask your piano
technician.
Keep plants, vases, drinks, or anything to do with liquid off the piano.
Condensation can ruin the finish, and spillage of liquids into the inner
mechanism can result in irreversible damage.
To prevent scratches on the finish, never place objects on your piano without a
soft cloth or felt.
Don't use furniture polish to clean your piano. It can soften the finish if
overused, and the silicone & oils present in many household brands can even
contaminate the wood, despite what the labels may say.
Just feather-dust the piano first (dust is abrasive, so wiping it first can
cause scratches), then wipe with a soft, damp cotton cloth, wiping in the
direction of the grain. Then, wipe up any excess moisture with a similar dry
cloth.
Do the same thing as above to clean your keys, but use separate cloths for the
blacks and the whites. Don't use cleaning agents!
If more thorough cleaning and polishing is desired, special polishing products
are available, and they are made specifically for piano finishes.
|