Saturday, October 6, 2007

How to Tune a Piano

Are you a piano player or teacher who dislikes the unnecessary expense of hiring a piano tuner and feels that you could do it yourself with a little training? Well this is your lucky day. All you need are the right tools, a piano and patience,

Buy tools. Tuning tools are hard to find, especially if you are accustomed to shopping at local retail locations. eBay is a reliable place for tuning tools.

Choose a tuning lever and try to find one with a star tip as opposed to a square tip. This will give you some extra flexibility.

Set aside a couple of hours. Depending on the out-of-tuneness of your piano, this could take awhile.

Remove every item between you and your tuning pegs.

Block off the outside strings of your starting octave octave: F below middle-C up to E above middle-C-

Notice three strings for each of the keys in that octave. Block off the outside strings of each of those keys with the temperament strip. You will need a flat-head screwdriver to stuff the strip between the strings. F up to E

Tips

a tuning lever (AKA tuning hammer)
A=440 tuning fork
felt temperament strip (preferably tapered)
2 rubber mutes

Warnings

A piano is a fine and delicate instrument that should be tuned about twice a year. There is more to tuning than just following these instructions. It would be advisable to seek the services of a professional piano tuner to make sure that the tone is of good quality and sound.