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Using
Passion and good Sense
Everyone playing the keys of the keyboard with passion, expects to hear the same passion expressed into the sound.
The player should not need to worry about the functioning of the action inside the piano to produce that sound.
This is the concern of the piano technician, who takes care of the intricate action with craftsmanship.
How
do the action parts move?

In this picture you can see the action of a grand piano with its hinge points.
The action of a piano or grand piano has a great number of moving parts.
When we press a key, it puts into action: a whippen, a hammer and a damper!
All these moving parts have their own hinge points.

One part of the hinge point, the so-called flange, is screwed on its rail.
The other part must be able to move.
The hinge point, the center pin, is locked into the wood of one part and is able to turn in the other part.
The little hole in that part is lined with cloth to make this possible. This is called the bushing.

This is a blown up picture of a part of the flange.
Very clearly one can see the bushing with red cloth and the center pin.
The hole in the wood is only 2.5 mm Ø, the center pin 1.3 mmØ
This technique has the advantage of a very small scale and a great durability.
The disadvantages are: wear and tear causing unwanted slacking of the parts. The bushing can become to loose causing the action part to tick.
High humidity is a greater enemy:
damp, but also the use of lubricants, causes the center pins to get stuck in the long run, with
a slow reaction of the action as a result.
It will get more and more heavy to play the piano and in the end it will be impossible, when different parts get completely stuck.
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