This is an update on the sostenuto issue. I found some excellent articles in past journals with good illustrations and procedures. Bill Spurlock had a 3 page technical with great diagrams and explanations, Susan Graham had several pages of great information on pedal regulation and Maria Pollock sent me some good tips. Thanks to the search feature that Jason Kantor created it is much easier to find journal articles on just about anything. One big takeaway was that the procedure for Steinways is different so it pays to read up. Anyway this was a Yamaha and fairly straight forward. With the action out I sat on the floor and worked the damper pedal and the sostenuto pedals by hand and performed various tests. I could visually follow the rotation of the blade and with my Ryobi inspection scope I could see where the blade was set and its angle. I tightened different screws on the brackets to snug them up With the action back in and cheek blocks screwed down I tested everything and found that it took a little more effort to get the sostenuto blade to rotate. I think I was guilty of not apply enough foot pressure but in the end I took out the lost motion that was in the una chorda/left shift pedal, tightened some screws on the pedal trapworks, tool out some of the lost motion in the damper/sustain pedal. Adding some pro lube spray on the keybed helped the action to slide to the right and back .
I will probably revisit the issue to put some new felt on the brackets that connect the pedal to the blade. Seems it could be snugger because it slides a little to the left from the torque
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James Kelly
Owner- Fur Elise Piano Service
Pawleys Island SC
(843) 325-4357
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