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#1836015 - 01/31/12 09:31 PM Two Tuning Lever Questions
TromboneAl Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/12/04
Posts: 557
Loc: Northern, Northern California
First, how can I evaluate the quality of a tuning lever? I've heard to avoid the cheap ones, but I don't know what distinguishes them from good ones.

Second, any suggestions for a source for a used lever? Ebay?

Thanks,

Al
_________________________
- Al

My Blog About Learning to Sight-read:
http://pianosightreading.blogspot.com

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#1836075 - 01/31/12 10:56 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
Supply Offline
2000 Post Club Member

Registered: 09/11/06
Posts: 2702
Loc: Vancouver Island, BC, Canada
With tuning hammers it is really fairly straight forward. You mostly get what you pay for. Professional tuners use good tuning hammers, costing $250 - $400. You can get something somewhat cheaper, but stay away form the $49.95 models, they will give you mostly grief.

If I were looking for cheap, I would consider something like this:
http://www.mothergoosetools.com/tuning_hammers/index.shtml
_________________________
Jurgen Goering
Piano Forte Supply
www.pianofortesupply.com

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#1836082 - 01/31/12 11:09 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
rysowers Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 04/16/07
Posts: 1955
Loc: Olympia, WA
I highly recommend the Levitan Classic from Pianotek. It is the lightest, and stiffest lever for the money. They sell it for around $150.
_________________________
Ryan Sowers,
Pianova Piano Service
Olympia, WA
www.pianova.net

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#1836111 - 01/31/12 11:55 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
Dave B Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/01/11
Posts: 780
Loc: Philadelphia area
It's difficult to choose a lever before you've been tuning for a few years. I suggest starting with what is referred to as an 'extension' style lever fitted with a size #2 tip.

The handle length of extension levers are adjustable to the torque feel of the of the piano you are tuning. It is interesting to experiment with the feel of different handle lengths.

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#1836154 - 02/01/12 01:17 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
beethoven986 Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 01/20/09
Posts: 1767
I also recommend the Levitan Classic, mentioned above. It my first and only (so far) tuning lever. Some day, I'll probably get a Reyburn impact lever for uprights (Oh, how I hate tuning uprights!), but for now I'm very happy just using the Levitan since a good portion of the pianos I tune are grands.
_________________________
B.Mus. Piano Performance 2009
M.Mus. Piano Performance & Literature 2011
PTG Associate Member (Just joined 5-5-2012!)

Current projects: Brahms: Variations on a Theme by Handel, op. 24

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#1836409 - 02/01/12 10:43 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: beethoven986]
Emmery Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 04/02/08
Posts: 1444
Loc: Niagara Region, On. Canada
Lots of good hammers out there and the best ones can get pricey but to a proffesional using them every day, its usually worth it. Stay away from any of them with permanently mounted tips or tips that use an unusual thread to mount to the hammer, a few of the pacific rim manufactured ones are like this. The cheapest hammers often have the cheapest tips on them also.

What I would like to know is who makes a decent tip these days. I've gotten half a dozen over the last ten years and they are all cr*p compared to the Watanabes from back in the 80's. Even the newer Watanabes just don't fit solid like the older ones did.
_________________________
Piano Technician
George Brown College /85
Niagara Region

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#1836430 - 02/01/12 11:11 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
That Guy Offline
Full Member

Registered: 10/07/11
Posts: 139
Loc: Lincoln, NE
My favorite right now is a #2 Watanabe that I bought maybe a year ago. It's nice and tight, at least by my standard. The lever I use is a Fujan and they have now gone to Jahn tips so that might be one to try. I've never used one. I also have some Hale tips that I like for certain pianos. Guess I got lucky with the Watanabe that I like. Sorry you've had bad luck with them.
_________________________
Scott Kerns
"That Tuning Guy"
Lincoln, NE
www.thattuningguy.vpweb.com

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#1836640 - 02/01/12 04:36 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
TromboneAl Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/12/04
Posts: 557
Loc: Northern, Northern California
I'm sure there are many (millions?) of tuning levers in the attics of people who wanted to try piano tuning.

My question is: if I see a tuning lever at a garage sale or on eBay, and I know nothing about the brand or company, how can I tell if it's a good tuning lever?

For example, my piano teacher says she has a tuning lever around somewhere. If she wanted to sell it to me, how would I know if it's any good?

Can you think of any other sources of used tuning levers?

For example, is this tuning lever any good?


Edited by TromboneAl (02/01/12 04:46 PM)
_________________________
- Al

My Blog About Learning to Sight-read:
http://pianosightreading.blogspot.com

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#1836657 - 02/01/12 05:08 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
rysowers Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 04/16/07
Posts: 1955
Loc: Olympia, WA
The lever shown in the picture is probably OK. At least it has a removable head and tip. Just keep in mind the better the lever the easier a time your going to have. That's why I strongly recommend the Levitan lever. Dan Levitan is one of Manhattan's top piano tuners. He put a lot of thought into the design and its price is unbeatable.

Stack the odds in your favor and get a good tool.
_________________________
Ryan Sowers,
Pianova Piano Service
Olympia, WA
www.pianova.net

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#1836796 - 02/01/12 09:19 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
Monaco Offline
Full Member

Registered: 07/28/11
Posts: 311
Loc: GA
Stiffness is one of the main factors in a quality lever. I don't know how you would easily test that.
_________________________
Ben Ereddia
Piano Teacher
Beginning Tech

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#1836818 - 02/01/12 09:52 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
rysowers Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 04/16/07
Posts: 1955
Loc: Olympia, WA
At an Annual PTG convention several years ago,Steve Fujan had a device to measure tuning lever deflection based on a particular amount of torque in order to compare standard tuning levers with his lever. I had him put the Levitan lever in the jig and it tested out a pretty close second to the Fujan. I wish I had written down the numbers, but at the time it convinced me that the Levitan lever has the best stiffness/lightness/cost ratio of the levers currently on the market.
_________________________
Ryan Sowers,
Pianova Piano Service
Olympia, WA
www.pianova.net

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#1836880 - 02/02/12 12:09 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
Dave B Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/01/11
Posts: 780
Loc: Philadelphia area
Al, Why would you buy a tuning hammer from a garage sale or off eBay when. new tuning levers are affordable and readily available from reliable sources???

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#1836894 - 02/02/12 12:52 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
erichlof Offline
Full Member

Registered: 04/26/10
Posts: 206
Hi guys,
Since Al was asking about eBay, I found this little kit that looks like everything you would need to get started, including a rosewood handle tuning lever:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Professional-Pia...#ht_3714wt_1224

or this?:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/SCHAFF-HALE-BALL...b#ht_500wt_1007

Of course I doubt the quality, but has anyone actually had experience with these 'deals' and should we just ignore them and move on to something in the $150 range like Ryan was saying about the Levitan? Does the tip in the picture look removable?

I've had people ask me how to get started tuning on a budget as well, and it would be nice to direct them to a 'kit' like this so they don't have to order all the different pieces and possibly be more confused. Any feedback is appreciated.

Thanks!
-Erich



Edited by erichlof (02/02/12 12:57 AM)

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#1836901 - 02/02/12 01:00 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: erichlof]
Supply Offline
2000 Post Club Member

Registered: 09/11/06
Posts: 2702
Loc: Vancouver Island, BC, Canada
This is the description of the product.

Quote from the eBay posting:
"Introductions:
Do you like the tuning kit which could help you play a piece of natural music? The music tuning kit here could meet your demand. Being made of high quality material that first-class piano equipment need, are also have standard structure with sophisticated craft. Besides theTuning Hammer great tuning quality, the stylish and newly tuning kit is durable and easy to use, promoting
the piano to have a reliable performance. This Tuning Hammer can bring no matter your music instruments or
yourself a higher taste. Don't miss this opportunity to buy Tuning Hammer, It is worth having!
"

Does this inspire confidence in you? If so, bid high, bid often!
_________________________
Jurgen Goering
Piano Forte Supply
www.pianofortesupply.com

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#1836912 - 02/02/12 01:27 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
erichlof Offline
Full Member

Registered: 04/26/10
Posts: 206
Hi Jurgen,

Well my Chinese should be so good! This eBay description has obviously been translated (poorly) into English. I'm just wondering, if you actually put this thing on a tuning pin, would it fall apart? Or would the tip not fit to where you can't tune the piano?

What about the second link to the ball-handle lever that I provided? That one is actually a brand name. Good price, but no rosewood in your hands either. What about tip quality and interchangeability?

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#1837065 - 02/02/12 09:06 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
Pianolance Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 07/28/09
Posts: 841
Loc: Nashville, TN
I have the tuning hammer pictured in the first ebay ad, the one that is a kit. The tip does not fit on the tuning pins correctly, it is very poorly machined. I don't know if the tip can be replaced or if it's standard thread. The hammer is stiff enough but the lever is very heavy. I consider the money I spent on it as stupid tax.
_________________________
Knabe 5'2" Louis XV Walnut circa 1927
Very part time piano broker.

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#1837084 - 02/02/12 09:28 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
erichlof Offline
Full Member

Registered: 04/26/10
Posts: 206
Thank you Pianolance for your honest assessment/experience of the first tuning lever. I was hoping that someone here on the Tech forum had seen this in person. I will now appropriately steer my 'newbie-tuner' friends away from this lever and company on eBay.

By the way, I wouldn't consider it a poor decision on your part to have tried this kit. The pictures make it look very nice. It is very close to what I use every day, although I spent $180 on mine and it says Hale on it. And the tip does indeed fit every piano I have ever tuned. If you look on the bright side, you have a nice carry bag for a future quality hammer(hopefully) and a temperament strip and all the mutes you will need for a while. Rubber is rubber and felt is felt, so I'm sure these items could still be used. smile

Does anyone have any experience with the Hale-Schaff ball-handle lever that I put in the second link above? The price is really nice on this one - perfect for someone who is on a budget and doesn't want to spend upwards of $200 to get into a 'hobby' that might not pan out.

It's odd with piano tuning vs. other endeavors. If I wanted to get into Digital Photography for instance, most people would advise me to get a low-end digital camera first, cheap or free software to edit, and I presto I have a new hobby that I can ease into or leave on good terms (inexpensive terms smile ). If I really get into it, I can upgrade when the time is right skill-wise and financially. But with piano tuning, most techs will tell you that basically you're looking at upwards of $200 (by the time you get a pro-hammer, mutes, strip, tuning fork, possible ETD). It's not something you can ease your wallet into. You basically have to start with the best equipment that pros use. This would be like me going out and buying an Canon DSLR without knowing what ISO is.


Edited by erichlof (02/02/12 09:41 AM)

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#1837150 - 02/02/12 11:28 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
Supply Offline
2000 Post Club Member

Registered: 09/11/06
Posts: 2702
Loc: Vancouver Island, BC, Canada
Thank you, Pianolance, for confirming my insinuation that this kind of product, sold in this fashion, is highly suspect in regards quality and performance. I like your term "stupid tax", and I appreciate your candidness in reporting your findings.

As I said up above in this thread, in piano tools you mostly get what you pay for. I should add that sometimes, when buying really cheap, you don't even get that. In tuning hammers, I would say anything below $150 falls into that category.
_________________________
Jurgen Goering
Piano Forte Supply
www.pianofortesupply.com

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#1837259 - 02/02/12 01:58 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
Emmery Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 04/02/08
Posts: 1444
Loc: Niagara Region, On. Canada
Its a good thing that the seller of that ebay tuning hammer didn't use voice recognition software to type up the ad, or it would be spelled "tuning hammel"...a worthwhile tool to compliment your HFT vice glips.
_________________________
Piano Technician
George Brown College /85
Niagara Region

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#1837275 - 02/02/12 02:33 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
UnrightTooner Offline
3000 Post Club Member

Registered: 11/13/08
Posts: 3936
Loc: Bradford County, PA
I was troubleshooting a japanese made marine radio years ago on a ship. (Ended up being a tripped circuit breaker.) The one drawing had me confused for a while. A device was labelled as a "Spritter." I couldn't imaging what it could be until I realized it was just an ordinary "Splitter." The person doing the translating must have been dictating to the person doing the drawing.
_________________________
Jeff Deutschle
Part-Time Tuner
Who taught the first chicken how to peck?

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#1837297 - 02/02/12 03:10 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: Dave B]
TromboneAl Offline
500 Post Club Member

Registered: 08/12/04
Posts: 557
Loc: Northern, Northern California
Originally Posted By: Dave B
Al, Why would you buy a tuning hammer from a garage sale or off eBay when. new tuning levers are affordable and readily available from reliable sources???


Because I am frugal *cough* cheap *cough*. I am just going to experiment with tuning so that perhaps I can fix up pianos at gigs that are out of tune. It's quite likely that I won't do much tuning -- I have an electric piano.

So, I don't want to spend much on something I may not use for long.
_________________________
- Al

My Blog About Learning to Sight-read:
http://pianosightreading.blogspot.com

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#1837349 - 02/02/12 04:35 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
rysowers Offline
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 04/16/07
Posts: 1955
Loc: Olympia, WA
Get a good lever, use it for a while and if you decide not to stick with it you will be able to sell it for probably 70% of what you paid. If you buy a Levitan Classic Lever, for $150 and then sell it later for $105, you are only spending $45 (plus the shipping) on a pro lever. I, for one, will be happy to by back your Levitan lever for that amount, just to have a a back up lever.
_________________________
Ryan Sowers,
Pianova Piano Service
Olympia, WA
www.pianova.net

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#1837761 - 02/03/12 07:34 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
UnrightTooner Offline
3000 Post Club Member

Registered: 11/13/08
Posts: 3936
Loc: Bradford County, PA
Al:

I buy used stuff from eBay, but not usually tuning stuff. Here's a hammer that might interest you:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/SCHAFF-ROSEWOOD-...1f8a0ca#ht_1608

An awful lot of pianos have been tuned with ordinary tuning hammers.
_________________________
Jeff Deutschle
Part-Time Tuner
Who taught the first chicken how to peck?

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#1837785 - 02/03/12 08:35 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
James Carney Offline
Full Member

Registered: 07/30/10
Posts: 254
Loc: new york city
Originally Posted By: TromboneAl
Originally Posted By: Dave B
Al, Why would you buy a tuning hammer from a garage sale or off eBay when. new tuning levers are affordable and readily available from reliable sources???


Because I am frugal *cough* cheap *cough*. I am just going to experiment with tuning so that perhaps I can fix up pianos at gigs that are out of tune. It's quite likely that I won't do much tuning -- I have an electric piano.

So, I don't want to spend much on something I may not use for long.


If you will be putting a tuning lever on anyone's piano other than your own, you need to realize that the entry-level junk being sold these days can easily damage the tuning pins. Please don't leave a wake of damage on pianos you don't own because you were unwilling to spend $150. on a quality lever with a quality tip.

Entry-level junk tools are a complete waste of money and time, and certainly won't help you learn how to do this work.

The Dan Levitan lever is an excellent value, and very high quality.

If you simply must spend less, then buy a used lever from a professional piano technician. But expect to pay good money for professional tools, even used ones.
_________________________
Keyboardist & Composer, Piano Technician
www.jamescarney.net
http://jamescarneypianotuning.wordpress.com/

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#1837871 - 02/03/12 11:03 AM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: Supply]
Mark R. Online   content
1000 Post Club Member

Registered: 07/31/09
Posts: 1308
Loc: Pretoria, South Africa
Firstly, does Pianotek deal with the general public, i.e. non-technicians? If not, Al would need to get an account with Pianotek somehow. If he needs to do this, he might as well go to Schaff too. Which is where my second point comes in:

Originally Posted By: Supply
I should add that sometimes, when buying really cheap, you don't even get that. In tuning hammers, I would say anything below $150 falls into that category.


Does that include Schaff's extension hammer? I must say, I'm very happy with mine. The Hale tips are so-so, but I'm getting a Watanabe tip soon. Even in the rosewood version, which is really just a nice-to-have, and even with the Watanabe tip added to the price, it's still under $150. I don't think anything about the hammer's quality could be called cheap, but that's just my opinion.

I'm using it on a Yamaha console with rock-hard pins tomorrow. Perhaps I'll eat my words by the time I'm done.
_________________________
If you get caught between child's play and rocket science,
the best that you can do, is
the best that you can do.


1922 Zimmermann 49", project piano.
1970 44" Ibach, for my daily fix.

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#1837923 - 02/03/12 12:11 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
erichlof Offline
Full Member

Registered: 04/26/10
Posts: 206
Hi Mark,
I believe we have the exact same lever! smile I was also going to recommend the brand that I use which is the Hale-Schaff rosewood extension with Hale tip. I really don't know the history, but I'm under the impression that Schaff was THE tuning hammer for pros in the early through mid 20th century and then Schaff somehow merged with Hale or bought Hale out in the latter part? Can you even buy a Schaff anymore, or is it considered a Hale now (or Schaff-Hale, since they wanted to keep the historic name on their product)?

I may be way off on my history of those two companies, but in any case they are considered pro quality/iconic are they not? My Hale tip has tuned hundreds of pianos ranging from Kimball spinets/Baldwin Acrosonics to Steinway grands, and the tip has ALWAYS fit the pin snugly without any feeling from me that it will slip off or damage (scratch/bend) the pins.

Problem is, like we saw with the 'kit' on eBay, there seem to be some impostors out there to watch out for, because this model is so iconic or 'typical' of what pros would use (or what people would think of when they think of a piano tuner's tools I guess).

Any clarification/corrections about this model and the companies of the past that have produced them is welcome.


Edited by erichlof (02/03/12 12:53 PM)

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#1837939 - 02/03/12 12:35 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
erichlof Offline
Full Member

Registered: 04/26/10
Posts: 206
Here is a link to Schaff-Hale products.
http://www.vandaking.com/piano-tuning-hammers.html

Most are under $150, but made in the USA and look quality to me. I would steer away from the $50 models as they are fixed and you have no length/tip options. But the Nylon extension model for $129 or even the Nylon fixed for $75 looks like a great way for a beginner to get started safely (same pro tip) and relatively cheaply.

Here's a link to a real kit (wink wink Al):
http://www.vandaking.com/piano-tuning-kits-Schaff.html

Scroll all the way down to the bottom. Nice hammer and rubber mutes/temperament strip and A fork with case (pretty nice starter kit if you ask me).

If I'm wrong in the quality assessment of the models on this website, please tell me. I'm sorry to press this issue, but I really want to direct beginning tuners to a website where they won't be cheated and also where they can spend less than $150. This HAS to be possible somewhere out there on the modern internet. smile

Thanks,
-Erich


Edited by erichlof (02/03/12 12:41 PM)

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#1837953 - 02/03/12 12:49 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
UnrightTooner Offline
3000 Post Club Member

Registered: 11/13/08
Posts: 3936
Loc: Bradford County, PA
You do not have to go far. This is a branch of PianoWorld:

http://www.pianosupplies.com/mm5/merchan...tuningequipment



$81.95
_________________________
Jeff Deutschle
Part-Time Tuner
Who taught the first chicken how to peck?

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#1837956 - 02/03/12 12:58 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
erichlof Offline
Full Member

Registered: 04/26/10
Posts: 206
Thanks Jeff! You did better than I thought was possible for a kit. So basically, if the tip is a #2 Star that is a quality tip, you could theoretically stick it on the end of anything (metal rod, scrap wood, a mini baseball bat - ha ha) and would it be 'safe' to use on most piano pins? Is the price of a tuning lever all about the handle?


Edited by erichlof (02/03/12 01:03 PM)

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#1837985 - 02/03/12 01:44 PM Re: Two Tuning Lever Questions [Re: TromboneAl]
UnrightTooner Offline
3000 Post Club Member

Registered: 11/13/08
Posts: 3936
Loc: Bradford County, PA
Erich:

I remember back when bell bottoms were popular. Mercedes-Benz car owners were found to be the most satisfied with their purchase. But who could spend $50,000 for a car at that time and not look like an idiot if they said it wasn't worth it?

The kit shown looks just like what my tuning instructor told me to get to start out with. I really and truly learned to tune in 5 lessons. The student hammer did not hold me back. But sure, I still find ways to improve, as I hope everyone else does, too. Later I got a Schaff extension hammer. I used the extension until my muscles got stronger, and then I never extended it again. I've used a student model again since then, and the only thing I don't like is the light weight. For tight pins I WANT a heavy hammer. So... I use the 2 lb speed hammer. (OMG it costs less than $150, and I can't see the emperor's new clothes!) I think the idea of a stiff hammer is over rated. The pin flexes so much I don't see how the stiffness of the hammer would matter.
_________________________
Jeff Deutschle
Part-Time Tuner
Who taught the first chicken how to peck?

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