how do you get rid of a piano?
#31
What do you use the wire for?
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#32
(10-18-2016, 02:16 PM)JosephP Wrote: What do you use the wire for?

garrote
Mark

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#33
That was the only thing I can think of. Are piano strings really any better than other instrument strings for that (guitar/bass/cello would seem a lot easier to access)? And do you really need 88 of them?
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#34
(10-17-2016, 07:07 PM)chips ahoy Wrote: Large sledge hammer,easier to move in small pieces.

Mel

This - I did harvest some panels and the keys/strikers for a future project. Then broke up the harp with a sledge and put it in my dump pile (advantage of living on acreage).
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#35
My neighbor removed the sound board with all the strings still attached, and sold it separately as art. He got $200 for it. The rest is easily broken apart and can go in your trash.
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#36
(10-18-2016, 02:16 PM)JosephP Wrote: What do you use the wire for?

Making springs.
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#37
I knew a neurosurgeon that used new sterilized piano wire to attach bone flaps back to the skull.

Don't think he would recycle used wire though.
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#38
I had an old upright give up and started leaning back against the wall in the house.
Friend came over and we were going to load it and haul it off. Couldn't get it from leaning on the wall so hard to get it out the door, so we busted it apart right there.
The string board was cast iron and was a bugger to deal with. We just gradually took all the wood off and cut the strings. Save a lot of the bigger wood pieces and hauled the cast board to the metal recycler.
Steve

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#39
Eric, has any of this helped you form a plan?
I started with absolutely nothing. Now, thanks to years of hard work, careful planning, and perseverance, I find I still have most of it left.
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#40
(10-21-2016, 05:55 AM)fredhargis Wrote: Eric, has any of this helped you form a plan?

well, it turns out that LOML wants to get rid of the piano, but the idea of sending it to the dump didn't appeal.  I was wrong about where it came from, it was the family piano. It even has a place for a payment book, they would go give the company $.25 every week and the book is still there.  Ok, I get the sentimentality, but it still is a crummy piano and nobody is going to want it and she doesn't want it.  Craigslist around here is full of free and nicer pianos.  So it's eventually going to the dump.  I think that fact has sunk in, but I am not particularly motivated to do anything about it right now. 

So thanks for the help everyone, I enjoyed this thread a lot even though I'm not following through right away. Still have the shed and basement to finish anyway
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