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Weinbach piano review
Weinbach piano review









Still in the secondhand pianos, this price range covers a multitude of ages, conditions styles and qualities. The next price range is the £500 – £1500 pianos. Buyer beware and try to do a little homework, have a look at my piano list for an idea of quality, have a look at the piano in person (never buy blind) and give someone like myself a ring to get some insider knowledge. This is the most popular area for beginner pianos and the easiest price range to get burnt. Most pianos up to £500 will be of an older type, in varying stages of decay, nearly always needing something doing to them. We’ll quantify this by saying there are always bargains to be had in most secondhand markets, but with pianos, most people have no idea what they are buying, so here are some generalisations. Well, that depends on your view of what a piano costs and how much you want to spend! You can spend well over £100,000 on a Steinway grand piano if you wish, but lets give some sensible advice here… Many problems lurk beneath the pristine casework of even the finest piano and you are sometimes spending a lot of money, so get it looked at! It may save you a lot of money. You need it to work, it needs to be even touch across its range, it needs to sound reasonably in tune when you see it (it shows the owner has made effort to keep it in good order) it needs to make a nice sound and if it looks the part as well, it may be a good piano to buy! Depending on the price of the piano, I would always recommend a technician like myself to visit the piano to assess its suitability and condition. I’m not saying you should spend a fortune, far from it, but at least be reasonable about what you are buying. You will be getting precisely what you paid for, a piano that is probably the most unsuitable for beginner instrument you can think of. I’m afraid I don’t hold with the ‘suitable for beginner’ purchase off of a well-known auction site for £1.

weinbach piano review

I would suggest you also need the best piano you can afford.

weinbach piano review

So, the main things you need to bear in mind when buying an upright piano are Has it got an iron frame? Is it an overstrung piano? Has it got an underdamper system? Is it from a known manufacturer? Once these are ticked off you can move on to the next advice.

Weinbach piano review trial#

The piano has been developed over 300 years to what it is today by trial and error and there are many types of instruments out there that were in the golden age of experimentation. There are different types of pianos in terms of their construction.









Weinbach piano review