Thursday, August 7, 2008

Keyboard: Balance pins, rack pins and mortises

Before unscrewing the key panel from the key frame, I transferred the actual locations of the rack slots back onto the ends of the keys with a thin knife blade and a straight edge:


Then I removed the key panel and drove the balance pins into the key frame. They need to protrude enough so that the thickness of the red balance pin felts and cardboard punchings underneath the keys, along with the keys themselves, is accounted for:


Also shown above is the green backrail cloth, which keeps the key ends from clacking against the key frame when they fall back.

Next, I transferred all the scribe marks on the key ends down the rear edge of the key panel, and then I drilled the rack pin holes using a spare rack pin as the drill bit:


This ensures a fit that is snug but not super-tight. I don't think there's any need to drill 0.1 mm undersize for these, as I have with other pins.

Keys are made to pivot up and down on the balance rail by elongating the balance pin holes into slots that have a triangular profile when visualized from the size. Each slot narrows from the top surface of the key down to the underside, where the original balance pin hole of 3/32" diameter is preserved. To make such a slot, this special mortise punch is used:


The tool is tapered from front to back but has parallel left and right sides, which keeps the slot of constant width (0.096", to match the balance pins). The tip has a rounded section that ensures the punch won't cut through the hole on the underside. This hole must be preserved so that the key won't shift back and forth as it moves up and down.

In use, the tool follows the balance pin hole drilled earlier and basically crushes aside the key material as it makes the triangular profile. Because no material is actually removed, apart from what is lost when the balance pin holes are drilled, the slot can be fine-tuned in future: if it's too tight it can be burnished with a spare balance pin, and if it's too loose it can be soaked with water or steamed over a kettle to swell the wood fibers. This approach is safer than trying to cut an exact slot, because once material is cut away it's gone for good.

I chucked the punch into the drill press (with the power off, of course) which gave me a handle to press the tool down as well as a way of keeping it square to the key panel:


The punch has a straight metal rod passing through it which acts as a visual aid in getting the punch sides parallel to the left and right edges of each key. Clamping the panel helps when withdrawing the punch from each mortise slot, as it tends to get jammed in there.

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