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#2029617 - 02/09/13 01:46 AM
Home study correspondence courses?
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Full Member
Registered: 01/06/13
Posts: 51
Loc: Central Illinois
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Hello,
I am considering doing a home correspondence course for piano tuning. The PTG has 3 home study courses listed on their website. They were the "Ameican School of Piano Tuning", "Randy Potter Course", and the "Butler School of Piano Technology"
I work full time so going to a full time school is not possible. There are very few tuners in my area and I called one to see about shadowing him and he promply said NO and hung up.
I have bought the Reblitz book some time ago, and this does indeed intrest me.
Any feedback good or bad on these 3 home courses would be greatly appreciated. I have heard good reviews about the Randy Potter course. The American School course looks very outdated and if filled with letters of students that "Got Rich Quick" and how they are a A+ member of the Better Buisness Bureau, ect...... You get the hind. The Butler school advertises more of a approach that you buy your own tools, supplies, ect to save you money.....
Again, Im just looking to get started and I realize this course is not going to make me a expert piano technician by any stretch and that true craftmanship takes years of practice and hundreds if not thousands of tunings. It is for self enrichment and self education to work on my own piano and possibly my friends and church.
Thank you kindly,
-Dustin
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#2029641 - 02/09/13 03:36 AM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: Dustin Spray]
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Full Member
Registered: 05/15/10
Posts: 122
Loc: Germany
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I wanted to take the Randy Potter Course because of the good reviews here. Unfortunately I never got any answer to my emails. I already have the tools and only wanted the course without tools. I also had contact to other people who are taking the course and they have the problem, that they send in their tuning practice videos and don't get answers as well.
In the meantime I got the videos only from Ebay and they are really good. The videos refer to the written course and I am sure this is just as good.
So, the course material looks to be very good. But the chance to get answers or a certificate in the end is very little.
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#2029650 - 02/09/13 04:15 AM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: Upright]
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Full Member
Registered: 01/06/13
Posts: 51
Loc: Central Illinois
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I have heard Randy is terrible to get ahold of, takes along time to reply to emails and takes months to review tuning excercises on students on tapes that were send in, That is discouraging to say the least......
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#2029660 - 02/09/13 04:52 AM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: Dustin Spray]
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/20/09
Posts: 2767
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I have a suggestion. Join the PTG as an associate, even if there isn't an active chapter near you. Buy the back articles on DVD from the PTG website for $50 and read at your leisure. You will then have access to more information than you'll know what to do with... 30 years worth for only twice the cost of the Reblitz book. There are excellent articles that can teach you the basics of tuning and repair. Money and time permitting, also consider attending the convention in Chicago this July. Chances are you'll learn more doing this than you will from a home study course!
Randy Potter tuition: $1795
~or~
My suggestion, including convention attendance: $1449ish
_________________________
B.Mus. Piano Performance 2009 M.Mus. Piano Performance & Literature 2011 PTG Associate Member
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#2029852 - 02/09/13 11:58 AM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: Dustin Spray]
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Full Member
Registered: 05/25/04
Posts: 469
Loc: Boston, MA
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Great suggestions from beethoven986. It was important for me to get a sense of the profession as well as a sense of the piano mechanics. I remember someone, at my first local PTG meeting, pointing out a woman across the room and saying, "She used to be a [whatever profession] and now she works on pianos. Doesn't she look happy?" and she did. It's not all about the piano action, it's also about the people who help me learn every day.
_________________________
Dorrie Bell Bell's Piano Service (Tuning, Regulation, Action Repair) Boston, MA
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#2029916 - 02/09/13 02:04 PM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: Dustin Spray]
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Full Member
Registered: 01/06/13
Posts: 51
Loc: Central Illinois
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Thank you. I will look into joining the PTG as a associate member. I was unaware of the info on the website that you told me about. I did see there conference was held in Chicago this year, I will look into attending.
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#2029946 - 02/09/13 03:33 PM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: Dustin Spray]
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Full Member
Registered: 07/28/11
Posts: 352
Loc: GA
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I did the Potter Course. Unfortunately. I found it to be poorly organized, full of typos and not anywheres near worth what I paid for it. Check with your local chapter of the PTG. Mine has loads of materials available for you to check out for FREE!!!! $1800 wasted! UGHHH!!!! If I had it to do over again, I would simply join the PTG. Continue to try to find an apprenticeship. Mine has been great. Just because one guy said no, don't give up. Good luck.
_________________________
Ben Ereddia Piano Teacher Beginning Tech
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#2029978 - 02/09/13 04:37 PM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: Dustin Spray]
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3000 Post Club Member
Registered: 09/11/06
Posts: 3462
Loc: Vancouver Island, BC, Canada
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This fairly important statement has so far not received comment: .... It is for self enrichment and self education to work on my own piano and possibly my friends and church... Piano technology is a fascinating field of study for a certain type of people. Most experienced techs will tell you that they are constantly expanding their knowledge, probably every week. That in itself is a reward, for me at least. However, it is not realistic to learn to tune pianos in order to tune your own piano, and those of a few friends and a church. Learning to tune properly involves long and intensive practice, ideally under the guidance of a teacher or mentor. It takes many, many practice tunings to be in a position to tune a piano. Numbers range from from a hundred to several hundred pianos. And then, to keep your chops up, you have to tune regularly. Tuning a few pianos a year is not going to do it. I notice that even after 30 years in the biz, when I don't tune for a few weeks (holiday etc) it takes me a while to get back into shape where I can "crank out" a good tuning in a reasonable time. Without my experience I would have slipped back to first base. I am not saying don't do it. I am saying that there is a lot more to it than meets the eye or than you can possible imagine at this point. I think that in light of this, perhaps a smaller initial investment than a full blown course with it's up-front cost might be the way for you to go, to get a whiff of what is involved. That said, I know of a number of techs who started with the Potter course and it has helped them get into the profession.
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#2030074 - 02/09/13 08:37 PM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: beethoven986]
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Full Member
Registered: 02/26/12
Posts: 211
Loc: Georgia, USA
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I have a suggestion. Join the PTG as an associate, even if there isn't an active chapter near you. Buy the back articles on DVD from the PTG website for $50 and read at your leisure. Wow! Thanks for that tidbit of information. I have often wished that I could buy a huge stash of back issues of the PTG Journal for the sake of my own study and to use in the training of shop techs. This makes it easier and makes it searchable! (or so I would suppose)
_________________________
Lavender Piano Services Established 1977 Tuning, Concert Maintenance, Rebuilding & Restoration
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#2030091 - 02/09/13 09:07 PM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: Dustin Spray]
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6000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/07/07
Posts: 6828
Loc: Grand Rapids Michigan
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Actually you can Phil! You can buy a DVD CD from the PTG. I don't know how many years worth of journals are on it, something like 20 or 30 years worth I think. The website is filled with wonderful material if one joins the PTG.
_________________________
Jerry Groot RPT Piano Technicians Guild Grand Rapids, Michigan www.grootpiano.comWe love to play BF2.
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#2030132 - 02/09/13 10:20 PM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: Jerry Groot RPT]
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/20/09
Posts: 2767
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Actually you can Phil! You can buy a DVD CD from the PTG. I don't know how many years worth of journals are on it, something like 20 or 30 years worth I think. The website is filled with wonderful material if one joins the PTG. It includes pretty much everything. 1979-2010, all on one DVD. I have all the PDF files saved on my laptop and refer to them frequently. You can browse the index by article, issue, or author and you can also use the Ctrl + F command to do a type search of these indexes. You find what you want, click on it, and the issue opens up to the correct article. All issues are searchable by Ctrl + F, as well. At $50 (member price), it's a no-brainer, as it contains all the PACE articles, etc. One would have to buy hundreds of dollars worth of books to acquire this much material!
_________________________
B.Mus. Piano Performance 2009 M.Mus. Piano Performance & Literature 2011 PTG Associate Member
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#2030141 - 02/09/13 10:34 PM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: Dustin Spray]
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Full Member
Registered: 01/16/12
Posts: 62
Loc: South Jersey
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Dustin, make sure you read Jurgen's post. He is absolutely right. I originally got interested in working on pianos in much the same way that you are. I quickly realized that it was "all or nothing." Particularly with tuning. Anyone with a mechanical brain can do some basic repairs on a piano, but learning to tune accurately (even with an ETD) is not really something you do just for fun, or just for your own piano.
And we don't say that to discourage you. In my case, I decided to go all the way and committed a lot of time to it. Maybe you should too!
_________________________
Ben Patterson Part-time Piano Tech Rural South Jersey
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#2030142 - 02/09/13 10:36 PM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: Dustin Spray]
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6000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/07/07
Posts: 6828
Loc: Grand Rapids Michigan
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Hey, thanks Beethoven!!! 
_________________________
Jerry Groot RPT Piano Technicians Guild Grand Rapids, Michigan www.grootpiano.comWe love to play BF2.
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#2030252 - 02/10/13 04:08 AM
Re: Home study correspondence courses?
[Re: Dustin Spray]
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Full Member
Registered: 01/06/13
Posts: 51
Loc: Central Illinois
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I will check out the PTG. I filled out the info form online and they are suppose to send me a info packet in the mail. How much are the dues, fees, ect? And do you know where the nearset chapter is from Ottawa, IL? It wouldnt let me view the "chapters". Maybe its because I dont have access to certain areas of their forum due to my non-membership. Do you feel there is enough info and structure for a novice? I guess I was assuming alot of the info was geared more for advanced techs and people that have been in the buisness for quite sometime. It did appear that the conferences held seminars for novices.
Thanks guys, you are indeed very professional and helpful.
-Dustin
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