Sunday, August 10, 2008

Keyboard: Sharp reliefs and head stop

A little more tweaking of the keys today:

First I had to cut a little relief area at the back of the natural fronts. When played, the sharps rock downwards in a slight arc, and the naturals must be trimmed back at the junction of the heads and tails to keep the front of the sharp from rubbing. I scribed a knife line at 10 degrees and cut out that area with a sharp chisel:



I also discovered that the keys were rubbing a bit at their back ends. It seems that slicing through the green felt glued to the key ends with the bandsaw created enough fuzz to cause quite a bit of friction between keys, so I sanded the key ends again. That worked: the keys now fall downwards under their own weight, which they hadn't been doing before.

Lastly I stapled a 2-1/4" strip of thick felt under the key fronts as padding to limit the downward travel of the keys. This head stop is a typically Italianate way of controlling the key depth:


Right now the keys are all falling downwards because they are unbalanced, but eventually they'll sit properly.

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