Mechanical Music Digest  Archives
You Are Not Logged In Login/Get New Account
Please Log In. Accounts are free!
Logged In users are granted additional features including a more current version of the Archives and a simplified process for submitting articles.
Home Archives Calendar Gallery Store Links Info

Spring Fundraising Drive In Progress. Please visit our home page to see this and other announcements: https://www.mmdigest.com     Thank you. --Jody

MMD > Archives > June 1998 > 1998.06.15 > 16Prev  Next


Converting 65-note Push-up Player
By Bill Shirley

Hi MMD family, Bill Shirley here.  Again MMDers have been generous in
their response to my request for information for modern-day reproducing
of Edison vertical cut disks.

I would like to pick up the thread of recently mentioned push-up type
65-note piano players.  About 20 years ago I received some information
concerning a conversion by replacing the 65-note tracker bar with an 88
note capacity tracker bar, but have never tried it.

As I recall from these long lost instructions,  the musical notes that
fell outside the still restricted 65-note range were T-tubed up or down
an octave to be played, albeit not in the original low bass or high
treble positions on an 88 note roll.

I have a Metrostyle Pianola 65-note push-up with one (count it ) one
cotton-pickin' roll.  As y'all know (that's the way we talk in the
Southern Oklahoma - North Texas area) compatible 65-note rolls are
hen's teeth scarce.

At the risk of defiling a something holy, and risking an outcry
that could be heard from Dallas to Wiscasset, I have entertained the
conversion bit over the years, but then each time I am reminded by
what I've read in the literature about these early players: (this
information was found in Dr. William B. White's 1925 book, Piano Playing
Mechanisms) early designers, lacking the air-tight and light-weight
materials that came later, apparently needed the larger duct size of
the 65-note tracker bar in order to admit enough air to quickly inflate
its corresponding pouch and lift a rather bulky valve to cause its
rather bulky pneumatic to collapse quickly enough.

Have any of you heard of or even tried such a conversion?  Could it
be that with our current lighter weight, air-tight materials, the air
admitted by a smaller 88 note tracker bar duct would activate these
original but restored mechanisms efficiently?  If I unearth the
original paper work in my current cleaning out of my work shop, I'll
share with you the verbatim instructions.

But then again if I'm really serious,  I could possibly have the
Broadmoore Research Corporation devise me a PowerRoll interface for
a 65-note tracker bar or use an Inline model.

Bill Shirley
Ardmore, Oklahoma  73401  U.S.A
bshirley@ardmore.com

 [ Try this experiment: Place a long strip of Scotch tape along the
 [ length of the tracker bar so that it reduces the height of the
 [ tracker bar hole to one-half, and see how it plays!  -- Robbie


(Message sent Tue 16 Jun 1998, 02:23:31 GMT, from time zone GMT-0500.)

Key Words in Subject:  65-note, Converting, Player, Push-up

Home    Archives    Calendar    Gallery    Store    Links    Info   


Enter text below to search the MMD Website with Google



CONTACT FORM: Click HERE to write to the editor, or to post a message about Mechanical Musical Instruments to the MMD

Unless otherwise noted, all opinions are those of the individual authors and may not represent those of the editors. Compilation copyright 1995-2024 by Jody Kravitz.

Please read our Republication Policy before copying information from or creating links to this web site.

Click HERE to contact the webmaster regarding problems with the website.

Please support publication of the MMD by donating online

Please Support Publication of the MMD with your Generous Donation

Pay via PayPal

No PayPal account required

                                     
Translate This Page