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No hay artículos en el carroChris Noak
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 4 de febrero de 2025
Download a good app and follow the instructions made tuning easy, though it took a while for my first time. The socket was a bit loose, but worked well. The mutes were nice and long. Great value for the money!
ylwsub68
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 2 de enero de 2025
The tuning hammer fit the pins on my 1930s upright piano perfectly, and the mutes held up ok with the strings. The rubber mutes feel like they could start fraying off the more you use them with piano strings. But overall I'm glad there was a kit out there that can get you started on piano tuning.
Wilf Cordy
Comentado en Canadá el 12 de enero de 2025
everything you need to get it tuned except the app
Customer
Comentado en Canadá el 3 de abril de 2025
Clé de bonne qualité avec tout le nécessaire pour accorder un piano. Je suis très satisfait.
Mr Doubtfire
Comentado en Canadá el 22 de octubre de 2024
Some reviewers mention a flexible head and a tuning fork. This set does *not* come with those things. I am leaving a review of the kit I bought from my 'Your Orders' section on Amazon, so it's definitely this one. Either the kit has changed or those reviews aren't for this kit.Regardless, it does come with a very sturdy tuning wrench with a long handle, which you will need on older 'stuck' strings, and it has an 8-point ("star") head that will fit almost any piano. Mine is a Lowrey made in the '80s, an average household brand, and it worked just fine. The angle and head are on a slight angle from each other, so make sure when you're using it that the head is straight onto the tuning peg. Don't judge how well it is seated by the angle of the handle but the angle of the head.The kit comes with a felt that is too thick to be practical, so I didn't use it, but the flexible silicone mutes worked just fine. Two come with long wire handles and two don't, so no matter where you are on the soundboard you can fit them in and get them out. Once you get a rhythm going after the first few strings, you'll fly through the rest of them.NOTE: Many of the tuning hammers on Amazon and Temu etc are described as 'piano tuning' hammers, but make sure you look at the size of the head. Almost all of the cheap ones are too small (4mm or so). They might work with a dulcimer but not a piano, which will need roughly 6.5mm or so. Also, you'll be grateful for the longer handle when you encounter strings that have been out of tune for many years. I doubt my piano had been tuned since 1990 and some of the strings were happy right where they were.TO SUM UP: This kit would be perfect if it included a short handled wrench and thinner felt, but it's worth the money and will save you a lot in the long run.
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