The most modern piano I own is a Yamaha Clavinova CLP-650, made in 1988, which is 7 years younger than my Realistic Concertmate, 50 years younger than my pianola and 82 years younger than my pipe organ.

Unfortunately it has a load of sticky keys and spraying it with various solvents just made it worse so I'm disassembling it completely, which takes ages because even electronic pianos have loads of bloody keys, and springs, and levers and shit.

#piano #repair

@johnl I have a CLP-511 which is a bit more recent, I think. Other than cleaning an astonishing amount of cat hair out of it when I got it, I’ve fortunately never had to repair it.
@jamesholden I've found almost every key and key weight to be coated in varying layers of grease, causing them to stick. I think my efforts to clean it with solvent just spread the lubricating grease further around. So has needed a full disassembly and clean.
@johnl Toolstation sell some concentrated non-solvent degreaser that works very well. Much better than washing up liquid or other household stuff.
@jamesholden tbh they are still tacky so that might be a good idea. There are a few, which one do you recommend?
@johnl This is the one I have.
@jamesholden @johnl can confirm citrus degreaser to be f’in amazin. If it can pull everything from an ancient bike chain it can probably remove anything.
@tamonten @jamesholden ok excellent thanks! I had used 70% isopropyl first, which is my go-to. How come these are better? (other than the fact I don't to fill my sink with isopropyl :)
@johnl @tamonten No idea on the chemistry. I use it for cleaning really manky stuff like the barbecue or the cooker hood, and it demolishes the grease. I think it’s a surfactant rather than a solvent. /fails chemistry again
@jamesholden @tamonten no worries, I don't need the chemistry just your recommendation, thanks!
@johnl @tamonten Bonus feature: Your keyboard will smell slightly of oranges for a while.