Regi
Regi,
Joe is correct, the RX hammers are really well suited to the piano, but the main problem is that they require a lot of needling when first installed. So they will be bright, but can be voiced to a pretty wide range of tones according to what the customer wants.
I have installed Ronsen Wurzen hammers in RX grands with good effect, and also Abel naturals. The range of tone (mellow when soft, bright when loud) is not quite as wide as with well voiced Kawai hammers, but in some circumstances that might be what is needed so it’s fine.
The key to any hammer you install in pianos is how you voice them. I feel that hoping to install hammers without doing voicing is not a wise approach – no hammer has the best sound if just installed and regulated. There will be a much wider tonal pallet if you work with them some after installation. For example, some years back a technician installed new Abel concert hammers in a Kawai EX concert piano without doing the full voicing prep and hammer shoulder needling. The piano sounded really poor, and the school that owned it started complaining to Kawai that there was a problem with this piano, it couldn’t be used any more! So I was sent to work on it and spent a good solid 12 or 13 hours pulling it back into shape – and everything was OK. But the piano still isn’t quite up to it’s potential.
I would not change the shanks to carbon fiber. Kawai tested this basic design many years back and decided to stay with hornbeam because the sound fit our scales and piano designs better than the carbon shanks.
My final thought is, are you and your customer sure you need to change the hammers? I am suspecting that, if you do not like to needle hammers, perhaps you should try that first anyway. Needle them using Kawai’s techniques to get a warmer sound, reshape them, refit them to the strings, then decide if new hammers are really needed. If they aren’t worn too thin the RX pianos have very voiceable hammers. There is a Kawai voicing guide in the Tech Support area of our web site – if you haven’t seen it before, download and read through the voicing guide. It is in the “Acoustic Downloads” area.
http://www.kawaius-tsd.com/index.html
Don Mannino
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Regi Hedahl
Sent: Friday, August 11, 2017 5:54 AM
To: pianotech
Subject: [pianotech] Kawai RX3 Hammer Recommendation
My customer recently purchased a 2003 Kawai RX3. He originally planned on purchasing a Shigeru Kawai SK3 but ended up purchasing the RX3 instead because of the substantial savings. With the savings, he has some money left over to upgrade this piano. Another piano technician highly recommended Abel hammers and WNG shanks & flanges for this piano. I am a fan of Ronsen hammers and have pretty much used that brand exclusively. However, I have never installed hammers on a Kawai so I'm not sure what kind of results I would get. The last hammer installation I did was on 1987 Baldwin SF10. I installed Ronsen Bacon felt hammers and got very good results with no voicing. Would I see similar results on a Kawai using Ronsen hammers?
Regi
Regi
I am familiar with both procedures and will give it a try on this set of hammers. It'll be very interesting to see the outcome because these hammers have a long ways to go.
Also, how about tapering these hammers to take some weight off of them? That would lighten up the action some and bring out some brilliance.
Regi
Regi,
Ah, that’s better news than needing to change the hammers! The piano most likely was softened by someone wanting it mellow, and if they got the core of the hammer soft using steam or a liquid of some kind it will be hard to get a nice singing tone from the piano again. If the softening didn’t go too deep under the strike point, then you should be able to get the tone back up.
Yes, strip file the hammers, and finish with the finest grit paper you have to get the surface smooth and get rid of tufts and such. A slightly pointed shape usually works best, so put extra pressure on the upper shoulders to slightly flatten that area, then go over the top with fine paper – I use 1,000 grit with a lot of pressure and speed.
Don’t neglect the action regulation. Bed the keyframe, straighten the hammers on the shanks (heat the shanks), space hammers to strings carefully. Get the letoff and drop up like it should be, and check your hammer blow. If the hammers are sounding better after filing, fit them to the strings nicely and then give the piano a good hard tuning.
If the hammers have been softened too much right under the strike point, then lacquer them. Normally Kawai doesn’t put any hardener in our hammers, but must needs and all that.
Enjoy! It will be a nice feeling to get a nice singing tone out of the piano again!
Don Mannino
(Kawai traveling tuner)
From: Regi Hedahl
Sent: Wednesday, August 23, 2017 11:29 AM
To: pianotech
Regi