Fantastically complicated. I wonder who invented it. By the way, this poor gentleman is trying his best to explain how it works. God bless his efforts.
I always wondered how one works, but seriously, the vaccuum storing, using ACTUAL PAPER as a valve and having a pneumatic vacuum engine to move it is just pure 200iq. I once built a vacuum engine out of lego of all things and with just a vaccum cleaner, they can easily reach 1hp and 6000 rpm. I always thought they worked like a music box, putting tension on the hammers, releasing them and then playing the note, also thinking it was spring or weight powered. But no! Thank you for this great video 🎉
Very interesting! My piano was formerly a player piano that was converted back, but I've always wondered how they worked. And now I am wishing it had never been converted because I just saw an identical one restored and for sale for nearly $30,000!!!! But my piano and I are good friends so I guess I'll just keep it as is, here with me. Thank you so much for this video.
Wow, that is a classic steampunk-style invention. This video was very fascinating and quite informative. Player pianos are really cool and are awesome to watch. Thank you for this fascinating upload!
I find this fascinating, because I do music production with MIDI files, and it's interesting to see how instruments were played automatically before computer technology.
thank you for sharing such an in-depth tour of your piano. I’m really interested in pneumatics and this also inspires my passion in music. the fact that we can combine them is truly fascinating.
@@gracew150 I don't know if this particular one is, I'm not going to watch the entire video again to see if he mentions the date, however, it is very similar to a piano I'm nearly certain is from the 1920's (the foot pedals have been replaced by an electric motor)--ruclips.net/video/zsjuIVoWuEg/видео.html
Kids today think us old buzzards are stupid.....these inventions (ie Big Steam locomotives) Vs 2 'thumbs on a screen' ; (invented by us old buzzards) !!!
Thanks for this. I was able to get my great grandmothers piano to work scrolls again for the first time since I was a little kid. Tempo is a little wonky but it still works pretty well.
Thanks for the great walkthrough. I love mechanical devices and always have. A piano is complicated to start with, and it's amazing how all the player parts are fitted and working reliably.
I live in Washington NJ it was once the “ piano capital of the world? Cornish pianos were made here( they have 4 pedals) on them... I don’t know if they made player pianos though... also... the Beatty Organ factory was in town, it they both were destroyed in fires😞😞, way before my time... (I’m 71 years old) my uncle was a professional musician Eddie Johnson, and he was Judy Garland’s piano player at one time, he also played in Ed Sullivan’s show’s orchestra... he also played at the songwriter’s guild show honoring Sammy Fain! I love your videos... thank you so much for your sharing these great videos🙏
Thank you, thank you, thank you! Hello from Rwanda. I'm a piano tuner and occasional repairer. My friend runs a music school for children in Kigali. A very nice Swiss guy donated this to us - we have absolutely no idea how it works or what we're doing. The mechanism looks exactly like that at the top, but there's weird wires and tubes at the bottom - I think it works on a vacuum pump. I never thought I'd see one here, so this is incredibly helpful. Ours is in pretty shaky condition. We'd love to get it playing again.
And thank you so much for covering how to take the action out - I was wondering about that as we've got a couple of missing tuning pins and would need to replace them and restring.
Just amazing technology in general, do you think any person these days would think of doing it this way? People would rather listen to music on their headphones...Jeez I refurbish pump organs as my personal interest.
I worked tuning-up 6V-71 Detroit Diesels, I’ve also worked on clocks, but I have never seen any mechanism as complex as that in your video. There seems to be a thousand thing which could malfunction, but apparently they don’t. The most important thing for good operation of any mechanism is maintenance. All moving parts need lubrication. What lubricant do you use? As far as getting your piano tuned, it doesn’t sound that bad. Usually you don’t need a professional tuner, because most of the strings are in tune. Only a few loose strings can make a piano sound completely out of tune, but you can easily find these few bad ones. For middle and high notes, there are three strings for each note. With the sustain pedal down, pluck each string for a note. An out-of-tune string will sound off (usually flat) from the other two. Takes a quarter-inch square socket on a ratchet or socket handle (a really long one, or use a pipe extension) and _verrrrrry slowwwwly_ turn the tuning peg for the offending string - tighten to raise the pitch or loosen to lower until the offending string matches the pitch of the other two. Same with the two strings per note on lower notes. Doing this on your own, you can eliminate many of the wolfs which make the piano sound out of tune. Your piano will not be in perfect intonation, but it will be better, and the process is free.
Usually, use graphite for lubricating wood and fabric, oil is only for all metal contact, like when rods pass through carriers or linkages. I know you asked 2y ago, but answer is valid.
That tracking system is very unusual for most pianos. Typically the roll moves not the tracker. The transposing system is also an odd duck as many transposing bars just move the whole note range of the piano over instead of the whole bar.
@@sublime88dc What brand is your player piano? Wurlitzer had a really bad mechanism that shifts the roll back and forth constantly, there's nothing to be done with one of those...
@@sublime88dc Disconnect the camshaft from the bellow on the tracker and you can just adjust the roll by hand, it's very effective and I used that method when my piano didn't have the tracker installed (it was away on a restoration vacation xD)
Thank you, currently restoring an old story and clark. Troubleshooting peddles right now which are very difficult. Roll goes very slow and is extremely tight and the pedals are a massive workout but it does play.
Interesting setup of the strikers. My player action has little wooden fingers with brass buttons that hit the wippens while your piano has the rods going straight up through the support rail with little push rods instead.
In the single valve standard action there are two gate boxes (they are small boxes with the linkages going into them). On gate box is on the right and has one sliding valve. The one on the other side has two sliding valves. The valve on the left is the re-roll valve that is closed in play and the other is the tempo valve. When the piano is set to play, the valve in the left gate box opens and admits air to the stack. The re-roll valve in the right gate box is closed while the tempo valve routes te air through the tempo governor making the roll played at desired speed. When the action is shifted into re-roll, the valve that lets air to the stack closes. The re-roll valve opens to bypass the governor and makes the air motor speed pedal dependent. What I have done to my action is disabled the re-roll valve to stay closed even in re-roll making the re-roll speed constant and adjustable to avoid damage to my of my rolls.
Thanks for your comments, I just acquired what looks like a piano that may have been restored a short time ago and the air motor turns the roll but no notes play at all and I’m certain that with your comments and this video I will find out why the notes are not playing. My guess is that a valve is faulty or a link has come off and is not actuating the valve. Thanks again.
@@sarahdeshay1394 It looks like it's been restored recently? It should work perfectly then, that's very odd that it isn't. Is there any key movement at all when you have it in play? If there is no key movement at all, go around the stack and see if all the screws are tight, if they're not, tighten them all. If that doesn't do it then the stack might be leaking like a sieve which would mean either the restorer had no idea what he was doing or that the materials used for the repairs were no where close to being good enough for the job.
Here's my take on the air motor. When there is vacuum applied the motor, one of the bellows collapses. Then that makes the crank shaft turn which lowers another small door in front of another hole and that causes that bellow to collapse. This goes in circles like that.
Back in the early 50s, my dad received a free player piano from one of our neighbors in southwest Detroit. All he had to do was remove it from their dining room to our sunroom. Upon getting it home, he refurbished it. It operated by pumping 2-foot pedals & I remember inscribed inside the door where the rollers were placed said it was built in 1913. We bought the music rolls at Grinnell's. Great times & memories.
The mechanical sustain is by far the best kind of manual sustain there is. You don't waste air when you use it and it only uses vacuum when the piano works it by itself.
Well, at least this type. Some transposing action such as the Standard have a tracker bar that is split into two fixed sections at the ends, and a moveable middle.The sustain hole is in the left fixed end and the moveable section has 85 notes, which means 2 dead notes in the base end and 1 in the treble. I know a couple other player actions that were transposers where like this as well.
Excellent mechanical marvel !! Apart from the ingenious details, I also noted that you have said the word "essentially" precisely 15 times throughout the whole video. (I counted them all).
Great video. I learned so much. I’m going to go look at a player piano that I may get. Can you show me how to take the cover off so I can see the inside?
Great video! I remember seeing these on older TV shows when I was a kd in the 80s an just assumed itwas magic. Thanks for the clarification. Again great video and explanation.
Hope you can get back to lakeside park carousel soon! I too am waiting to get back to perkasie carousel which i visit alot, which has a stinson band organ
To get expression with the pedals, one of my tricks is to jam both pedals at the same time and that will give a burst in volume. Pedaling slower or lighter will result in very soft playing and you can actually stop pedaling so the music slows down and gets quieter at the same time for a more virtuoso kind of playing.
I enjoyed playing with the controls as one experiment with different expressions of music as well. Sometimes found that is interesting as it would sound exactly the same has music played earlier or later in history.
@@jamesgleeson6538 Yeah, good dynamics controls on player pianos are very nice when you like to make music very expressive instead of just adding sustain like I do
You described the air motor very well. It's a 5-cylinder (Like an old Mercedes!) engine driven by timed vacuum in each "cylinder" rather than timed explosions in each. The crank shaft creates rotation to move the roll. (I am a Diesel mechanic) LOL.
Great video, thank you! I am new to all of this. I just got a 1910 player piano by The Autopiano Company. I don’t think my bar tracker works like yours since it’s so old. How does my tracker work?
I am a amateur keyboard player and am thinking of purchasing a used piano. However I am very interested in player piano. Will I be able to use it as a regular piano? What are your thoughts on this? Will this also play as good as a regular piano? While some people think a player piano was a gadget in that era, I am thinking this was a work of a genius: a regular piano and a player piano all in one.
You can certainly use a player piano as a regular piano. That's what I do, as this is my only piano. You may have to have some work done on the action due to its age, but otherwise it will play just as good as a modern upright, and will likely sound better.
Player pianos are largely useless due to a worldwide lack of rolls. However, a player piano will play perfectly as a regular piano. It is harder for a piano technician to maintain due to the mechanism in the way. Old pianos have certain issues due to their age, but also have certain advantages (old growth wood, etc.). You may find an old piano to be much more solidly constructed than a newer piano. They were designed to live in a home without climate control.
@@scottsmith2052 "Worldwide lack of rolls"? It depends on where in the world you are, but in US/Canada there are many many many old rolls available, and some newer ones too. You are correct that most player pianos are statistically in the 100 year old range, but each piano is individual in its condition, in terms of what maintenance, rebuilding has been done and the environment in which it has lived. It is less difficult to find an old dilapidated player piano than it is to find one in good playing condition, but if you see one of the latter, go for it!
I notice a tone difference with all pianos and pianolas. Depends on the types of music one prefers to listen to most of the time. If one gets a pianola or piano helps to let the tuner or piano/pianola repairer know prefered music types.
@@scottsmith2052 Australia is a good source for rolls. I certainly agree with the old wood aspect you mention. The space within is generally higher in the older ones, which resonates the sound better to me
What a GREAT video and GREAT engineering! Have you ever mirror-ed a roll? I do not mean rolling it backwards. but horizontally flipping the paper on the roll so the whole melody will be inverted
How do the holes in the paper communicate the inner dynamics of the song? Do you know? I definitely hear dynamics in these pianola songs... so amazing...
@@PiotrBarcz I know, late reply, but I've seen a few of these Plaola mechanisms, and rebuilt 2 of them identical to this one, the tracking device works beautifully, best ever! even compared to the Otto Higel, or Standard 4 hole tracker, this player action was made in Ontario Canada in house by R.S. Williams & Sons for their pianos and other R.S Williams brand names like Ennis & Co, this whole player system is a joy to restore, it's a simple system, but effective with the manual sustain etc..
@@tony--james The tracker I really like because it does absolutely nothing abrasive to the roll. Then again, on the rewind it might be rough for the roll because the paper might've slipped around a bit on the takeup spool because there is no active tracking system, it's a passive design.
Thanks so much for this detailed view. Just curious, are there corresponding "recorder pianos" to create the rolls? And are there also format issues, like rolls that can only be played on certain playback systems?
Where did you find this piano Chris? I live in Oshawa and know some of the history of Williams and Sons Piano Works. My niece Jessica was thrilled when she discovered a Williams piano in a ghost town in Northern British Columbia.
Щойно дізнався, навіть трохи соромно бо мені 52 , що такі диво-штуки існували, та навіть ще існують!.. Здивуванню моєму не має меж, я вражений! Музично-механічний комп'ютер! Не інакше! Браво майстру, що зробив! Та володарю, що розповів!.. Привіт з України!
Hi Chris. Your video was very informative thank you. I just got a player. Foster & Co. I looks like it has been redone but I really don't know. Looks in good shape. I notice there are screws on top at the back of the pedals. Not the pump pedals. The middle pedal doesn't have a screw. Is that normal or is it missing? Thanks.
Thanks for all this info! Who do you use to tune this instrument? I have a piano tuner, but we aren’t confident in taking out the mechanisms before the tuner comes.
My grandparents bought a Baldwin brand new in 1928. And it cost a little over $300. They bought it on an installment plan at around $15 a month. A year later Baldwin lost one of the payments that they made and they didn't have proof because it was Cash mailed in and they had to repay for the same month twice. After that they were adamant on saving every receipt for everything they paid for and I have all those receipts to this day from over a hundred years ago.
Hi Chris…My upright is from 1913 with a loud, bass and treble levers. Do the rolls tell when to use these levers or did the piano player back in the day simply adjust these levers by ear? Also, when you have these player pianos tuned, does something have to be removed? If so, what? Thanks!
An early automated instrument. What did people think when they saw these in a time when maybe the telephone and other things were just beginning to appear or appear only in certain parts of the country? The song sheet or whatever it is reminds me of punch cards that very early computers used (though we may not think of them as computers but brought in the very basic principles of computers today)
Chris, I have two questions, and you might find them weird, but . . . first, loved the video. I wasn't exactly clear about the piano continuing to play when the "foot pumper" stepped away from it. Would the piano still play? And how long does it take a music roll to rewind? Does it depend on the length of the piece? Thank you!
The piano will continue to play for a short time after pumping stops because there is still vacuum in the system. My piano is pretty airtight, so it takes a few seconds. The rewind speed does depend on the speed. Longer rolls will take longer. To get a little more complicated, the rolls don't rewind or play at a constant rate. As the roll on the spool gets "thicker", the roll actually passes over the tracker bar slightly faster. Think of it like a record, where the outside is actually spinning considerably faster than the inside. This is why the songs actually speed up a little towards the end when playing. This effect can be noticed in many of my videos, especially with the longer rolls.
This reminds me of the scifi short story called "exhalation" about a society of air-powered robots who live on a planet that has a giant reservoir of air inside it and they recharge their lungs at these air pumping stations so that all the pneumatic mechanisms in their bodies can keep working. I always had trouble visualizing what the mechanisms would have looked like, but now i imagine they would be somewhat similar to this piano. It almost seems like a living creature compared to a computer filled with unmoving electronic components 😮
Does anyone happen to know if some of these types of player pianos were ever refitted later on to also run on electricity, rather than manually pumping the foot pedals? Back when I was a little kid in the '70s, our house had one, and I remember sitting on the bench, pumping the pedals to listen to the songs, but I also have vague memories of it being able to be set up to run on its own, without having to have someone physically operating the pedals. Am I correct, or is my memory just playing tricks on me?
If you mean when I'm playing the piano by hand, the pumping pedals fold up so the normal piano pedals can be used. If you are referring to the piano playing itself with no pumping, well, it can't. In order for that to work, the piano needs an electric vacuum pump, which mine does not have.
Who would even think of this? Beyond genius.
AND THAT'S WHO THINKS ABOUT IT
That's all I was thinking the whole time.
Edward Leveaux and Edwin S. Votey, basically super geniuses of their time
Someone that hated piano lessons.
And as far as I could see - no electricity involved !
Fantastically complicated. I wonder who invented it. By the way, this poor gentleman is trying his best to explain how it works. God bless his efforts.
I always wondered how one works, but seriously, the vaccuum storing, using ACTUAL PAPER as a valve and having a pneumatic vacuum engine to move it is just pure 200iq. I once built a vacuum engine out of lego of all things and with just a vaccum cleaner, they can easily reach 1hp and 6000 rpm. I always thought they worked like a music box, putting tension on the hammers, releasing them and then playing the note, also thinking it was spring or weight powered. But no! Thank you for this great video 🎉
Very interesting! My piano was formerly a player piano that was converted back, but I've always wondered how they worked. And now I am wishing it had never been converted because I just saw an identical one restored and for sale for nearly $30,000!!!! But my piano and I are good friends so I guess I'll just keep it as is, here with me. Thank you so much for this video.
Have you ever looked into costs associated with restoring it back?
61 years on this planet, and I finally get to find out how these work! Thanks! Since the roll is "code" driving a real instrument, It's kind of MIDI!
Extremely informative. I’ve seen it in western movies and I always wondered how it works. Thank you very much for posting this video
I have this exact piano which has been completely restored to original specs. I always wondered how it worked. THANK YOU - This was fantastic!
Wow, that is a classic steampunk-style invention. This video was very fascinating and quite informative. Player pianos are really cool and are awesome to watch. Thank you for this fascinating upload!
I find this fascinating, because I do music production with MIDI files, and it's interesting to see how instruments were played automatically before computer technology.
thank you for sharing such an in-depth tour of your piano. I’m really interested in pneumatics and this also inspires my passion in music. the fact that we can combine them is truly fascinating.
I got my first player piano yesterday, going to do a full resto by myself!
I can't believe something that complicated from back in the 1920's actually works. Great video, Thanx!!
is this piano from the 1920s?
@@gracew150 I don't know if this particular one is, I'm not going to watch the entire video again to see if he mentions the date, however, it is very similar to a piano I'm nearly certain is from the 1920's (the foot pedals have been replaced by an electric motor)--ruclips.net/video/zsjuIVoWuEg/видео.html
Kids today think us old buzzards are stupid.....these inventions (ie Big Steam locomotives) Vs 2 'thumbs on a screen' ; (invented by us old buzzards) !!!
@@philhugill8458 ruclips.net/video/bsdWgmp4TaQ/видео.html
@@gracew150 He mentioned that it was from 1929.
How did I go by all my life without this information?
Thanks for this. I was able to get my great grandmothers piano to work scrolls again for the first time since I was a little kid. Tempo is a little wonky but it still works pretty well.
Ingenious. I often wondered how those tiny little holes played the notes. Thanks for the explanation
Thanks for the great walkthrough. I love mechanical devices and always have. A piano is complicated to start with, and it's amazing how all the player parts are fitted and working reliably.
I live in Washington NJ it was once the “ piano capital of the world?
Cornish pianos were made here( they have 4 pedals) on them... I don’t know if they made player pianos though... also... the Beatty Organ factory was in town, it they both were destroyed in fires😞😞, way before my time... (I’m 71 years old) my uncle was a professional musician Eddie Johnson, and he was Judy Garland’s piano player at one time, he also played in Ed Sullivan’s show’s orchestra... he also played at the songwriter’s guild show honoring Sammy Fain! I love your videos... thank you so much for your sharing these great videos🙏
Thank you, thank you, thank you! Hello from Rwanda. I'm a piano tuner and occasional repairer. My friend runs a music school for children in Kigali. A very nice Swiss guy donated this to us - we have absolutely no idea how it works or what we're doing. The mechanism looks exactly like that at the top, but there's weird wires and tubes at the bottom - I think it works on a vacuum pump. I never thought I'd see one here, so this is incredibly helpful. Ours is in pretty shaky condition. We'd love to get it playing again.
And thank you so much for covering how to take the action out - I was wondering about that as we've got a couple of missing tuning pins and would need to replace them and restring.
Thanks for the video, I was looking on how those pianos worked after starting watching Westworld, truly amazing!
Amazing technology for 1929
Just amazing technology in general, do you think any person these days would think of doing it this way? People would rather listen to music on their headphones...Jeez
I refurbish pump organs as my personal interest.
@isaacposselt7089 well I mean yes. People do think of this and ever further, which is why we went to space.
That tracking servomechanism is so beautifully simple. Great video!
Great video, glad it got recommended to me (:
I worked tuning-up 6V-71 Detroit Diesels, I’ve also worked on clocks, but I have never seen any mechanism as complex as that in your video. There seems to be a thousand thing which could malfunction, but apparently they don’t.
The most important thing for good operation of any mechanism is maintenance. All moving parts need lubrication. What lubricant do you use?
As far as getting your piano tuned, it doesn’t sound that bad. Usually you don’t need a professional tuner, because most of the strings are in tune. Only a few loose strings can make a piano sound completely out of tune, but you can easily find these few bad ones. For middle and high notes, there are three strings for each note. With the sustain pedal down, pluck each string for a note. An out-of-tune string will sound off (usually flat) from the other two.
Takes a quarter-inch square socket on a ratchet or socket handle (a really long one, or use a pipe extension) and _verrrrrry slowwwwly_ turn the tuning peg for the offending string - tighten to raise the pitch or loosen to lower until the offending string matches the pitch of the other two. Same with the two strings per note on lower notes.
Doing this on your own, you can eliminate many of the wolfs which make the piano sound out of tune. Your piano will not be in perfect intonation, but it will be better, and the process is free.
More!! 👍
Usually, use graphite for lubricating wood and fabric, oil is only for all metal contact, like when rods pass through carriers or linkages. I know you asked 2y ago, but answer is valid.
That tracking system is very unusual for most pianos. Typically the roll moves not the tracker. The transposing system is also an odd duck as many transposing bars just move the whole note range of the piano over instead of the whole bar.
How would I align and set my role? Mine will move left and right and it starts to mess up my paper.
@@sublime88dc What brand is your player piano? Wurlitzer had a really bad mechanism that shifts the roll back and forth constantly, there's nothing to be done with one of those...
@@PiotrBarcz it's a Modello. The auto on the roll doesn't work too good. I keep it in hand and twist the knob ţo adjust as it plays.
@@sublime88dc Disconnect the camshaft from the bellow on the tracker and you can just adjust the roll by hand, it's very effective and I used that method when my piano didn't have the tracker installed (it was away on a restoration vacation xD)
This was recommended to me somehow and on top of thanking RUclips for the rec, I thank you for the neat video. Completely awesome. Have subscribed.
very interesting. My Grandparents had a player piano. That was one of my favorite things to pump and watch the keys play and the piano roll roll.
Thank you, currently restoring an old story and clark. Troubleshooting peddles right now which are very difficult. Roll goes very slow and is extremely tight and the pedals are a massive workout but it does play.
Interesting setup of the strikers. My player action has little wooden fingers with brass buttons that hit the wippens while your piano has the rods going straight up through the support rail with little push rods instead.
In the single valve standard action there are two gate boxes (they are small boxes with the linkages going into them). On gate box is on the right and has one sliding valve. The one on the other side has two sliding valves. The valve on the left is the re-roll valve that is closed in play and the other is the tempo valve. When the piano is set to play, the valve in the left gate box opens and admits air to the stack. The re-roll valve in the right gate box is closed while the tempo valve routes te air through the tempo governor making the roll played at desired speed. When the action is shifted into re-roll, the valve that lets air to the stack closes. The re-roll valve opens to bypass the governor and makes the air motor speed pedal dependent. What I have done to my action is disabled the re-roll valve to stay closed even in re-roll making the re-roll speed constant and adjustable to avoid damage to my of my rolls.
Thanks for your comments, I just acquired what looks like a piano that may have been restored a short time ago and the air motor turns the roll but no notes play at all and I’m certain that with your comments and this video I will find out why the notes are not playing. My guess is that a valve is faulty or a link has come off and is not actuating the valve. Thanks again.
@@sarahdeshay1394 It looks like it's been restored recently? It should work perfectly then, that's very odd that it isn't. Is there any key movement at all when you have it in play? If there is no key movement at all, go around the stack and see if all the screws are tight, if they're not, tighten them all. If that doesn't do it then the stack might be leaking like a sieve which would mean either the restorer had no idea what he was doing or that the materials used for the repairs were no where close to being good enough for the job.
Here's my take on the air motor. When there is vacuum applied the motor, one of the bellows collapses. Then that makes the crank shaft turn which lowers another small door in front of another hole and that causes that bellow to collapse. This goes in circles like that.
Thank you. I’ve been trying to get my grandmothers Steoeber working properly. This video answered several questions
Fascinating. Thanks for the tour!
Merci beaucoup pour les explications, bien faites et pas trop rapide, je suis français et j’ai tout compris!
Back in the early 50s, my dad received a free player piano from one of our neighbors in southwest Detroit. All he had to do was remove it from their dining room to our sunroom. Upon getting it home, he refurbished it. It operated by pumping 2-foot pedals & I remember inscribed inside the door where the rollers were placed said it was built in 1913. We bought the music rolls at Grinnell's. Great times & memories.
Insano stuff, I'd never be able to reproduce this amazing invention, Edwin and Edward were freaking geniuses!
Awesome! Really interesting.
This is INSANE! What an amazing invention!
My piano playing sucks too. Brilliant explanation. I love the fact that midi imitates the pianola Roll.
The mechanical sustain is by far the best kind of manual sustain there is. You don't waste air when you use it and it only uses vacuum when the piano works it by itself.
Wild wild west ! Insanely complex pieces of machinery! Love it ! You can connect a shop vacuum by the way ! It will work
You make the excellent observation that transposer tracker bars do not have sustain pedal holes because they don't always line up.
Well, at least this type. Some transposing action such as the Standard have a tracker bar that is split into two fixed sections at the ends, and a moveable middle.The sustain hole is in the left fixed end and the moveable section has 85 notes, which means 2 dead notes in the base end and 1 in the treble. I know a couple other player actions that were transposers where like this as well.
Some transposing tracker bars have an extra wide sustain hole to allow it to work in multiple positions. It really just depends on the player action.
This is so cool, I gotta get one someday. Would be so fun to restore something like this!
This is incredible, such an amazing machine. So cool
This is fascinating.
Excellent mechanical marvel !! Apart from the ingenious details, I also noted that you have said the word "essentially" precisely 15 times throughout the whole video. (I counted them all).
For a basic explanation, yours is very good
Thanks!
Thank you! Well done.
Thanks indeed. Very well explained.
Really fascinating. I had no idea.
Great video. I learned so much.
I’m going to go look at a player piano that I may get.
Can you show me how to take the cover off so I can see the inside?
Great video! I remember seeing these on older TV shows when I was a kd in the 80s an just assumed itwas magic. Thanks for the clarification. Again great video and explanation.
Great video. I was curious about this and you have satiated that curiosity!
Can you do a video taking the top system out and putting it back together? I'm trying to get my player piano going.
Sure! I will try to do it this weekend.
ruclips.net/video/8UBU33TpQlo/видео.html
@@ChrisPlaola thank you so much! That's awesome. I'm going to watch and see if I can figure out what's wrong with mine. I'll keep you posted.
@@salr.f7644 Np!
Hope you can get back to lakeside park carousel soon! I too am waiting to get back to perkasie carousel which i visit alot, which has a stinson band organ
I hope so too.
To get expression with the pedals, one of my tricks is to jam both pedals at the same time and that will give a burst in volume. Pedaling slower or lighter will result in very soft playing and you can actually stop pedaling so the music slows down and gets quieter at the same time for a more virtuoso kind of playing.
I enjoyed playing with the controls as one experiment with different expressions of music as well. Sometimes found that is interesting as it would sound exactly the same has music played earlier or later in history.
@@jamesgleeson6538 Yeah, good dynamics controls on player pianos are very nice when you like to make music very expressive instead of just adding sustain like I do
You described the air motor very well. It's a 5-cylinder (Like an old Mercedes!) engine driven by timed vacuum in each "cylinder" rather than timed explosions in each. The crank shaft creates rotation to move the roll. (I am a Diesel mechanic) LOL.
Kinda like a steam engine powered by differential pressure between atmosphere and the vacuum system.
Incredible
I love this video and player pianos😍😍😍👍
Great video, thank you! I am new to all of this. I just got a 1910 player piano by The Autopiano Company. I don’t think my bar tracker works like yours since it’s so old. How does my tracker work?
Good presentation. You missed talking about the governor.
Hi Chris, thank you for this video. What kind of maintenance do you do for it? Looking to purchasing one soon, a Bell 1900.
great content!
I love this Piano
Thanks a lot for this!
I am a amateur keyboard player and am thinking of purchasing a used piano. However I am very interested in player piano. Will I be able to use it as a regular piano? What are your thoughts on this? Will this also play as good as a regular piano? While some people think a player piano was a gadget in that era, I am thinking this was a work of a genius: a regular piano and a player piano all in one.
You can certainly use a player piano as a regular piano. That's what I do, as this is my only piano. You may have to have some work done on the action due to its age, but otherwise it will play just as good as a modern upright, and will likely sound better.
Player pianos are largely useless due to a worldwide lack of rolls. However, a player piano will play perfectly as a regular piano. It is harder for a piano technician to maintain due to the mechanism in the way. Old pianos have certain issues due to their age, but also have certain advantages (old growth wood, etc.). You may find an old piano to be much more solidly constructed than a newer piano. They were designed to live in a home without climate control.
@@scottsmith2052 "Worldwide lack of rolls"?
It depends on where in the world you are, but in US/Canada there are many many many old rolls available, and some newer ones too.
You are correct that most player pianos are statistically in the 100 year old range, but each piano is individual in its condition, in terms of what maintenance, rebuilding has been done and the environment in which it has lived.
It is less difficult to find an old dilapidated player piano than it is to find one in good playing condition, but if you see one of the latter, go for it!
I notice a tone difference with all pianos and pianolas. Depends on the types of music one prefers to listen to most of the time. If one gets a pianola or piano helps to let the tuner or piano/pianola repairer know prefered music types.
@@scottsmith2052 Australia is a good source for rolls. I certainly agree with the old wood aspect you mention. The space within is generally higher in the older ones, which resonates the sound better to me
3:44 lol that was cute
Excellent vid. I suddenly wondered how they worked, though why I was thinking about them, who knows?
The tracking system if effing ingenious.
What a GREAT video and GREAT engineering!
Have you ever mirror-ed a roll? I do not mean rolling it backwards. but horizontally flipping the paper on the roll so the whole melody will be inverted
I tried it once . Found it would tear the roll. Also, the paper would raise removing the seal one needs.
i love this machine!
Wow 😳😳😳 that's very educational. I have piano rolls but no player piano... Yet.
How do the holes in the paper communicate the inner dynamics of the song? Do you know? I definitely hear dynamics in these pianola songs... so amazing...
I love this song😍😍
It’s an air powered computer(ish lol)! Awesome!
I never knew how these worked
Wow! It's an Otto Higel if I'm not mistaken! Neat! (the player action)
The player action is called "Plaola" and it was made by R.S. Williams.
@@ChrisPlaola Oh it's a Plaola. Intersting, I'll look it up and if i find anything interesting I will let you know.
@@PiotrBarcz I know, late reply, but I've seen a few of these Plaola mechanisms, and rebuilt 2 of them identical to this one, the tracking device works beautifully, best ever! even compared to the Otto Higel, or Standard 4 hole tracker, this player action was made in Ontario Canada in house by R.S. Williams & Sons for their pianos and other R.S Williams brand names like Ennis & Co, this whole player system is a joy to restore, it's a simple system, but effective with the manual sustain etc..
@@tony--james So this is a completely Canadian design? Man, you guys up North really know your stuff, that action is THE best!
@@tony--james The tracker I really like because it does absolutely nothing abrasive to the roll. Then again, on the rewind it might be rough for the roll because the paper might've slipped around a bit on the takeup spool because there is no active tracking system, it's a passive design.
I grew up with one of these at my grandparent's house. It's not doing much now, I hope it's still in good condition.
This is crazy complicated I can’t believe the things people’s used to come up with.
thank you bro
Thanks so much for this detailed view. Just curious, are there corresponding "recorder pianos" to create the rolls? And are there also format issues, like rolls that can only be played on certain playback systems?
Where did you find this piano Chris? I live in Oshawa and know some of the history of Williams and Sons Piano Works. My niece Jessica was thrilled when she discovered a Williams piano in a ghost town in Northern British Columbia.
Щойно дізнався, навіть трохи соромно бо мені 52 , що такі диво-штуки існували, та навіть ще існують!..
Здивуванню моєму не має меж, я вражений!
Музично-механічний комп'ютер! Не інакше!
Браво майстру, що зробив!
Та володарю, що розповів!..
Привіт з України!
Beautiful, how can I buy one like this?
Can i ask please, have you heard of a kastner & co gors & kallmann, im looking at purchasing one but cant find any info via google.
Hi Chris. Your video was very informative thank you. I just got a player. Foster & Co. I looks like it has been redone but I really don't know. Looks in good shape. I notice there are screws on top at the back of the pedals. Not the pump pedals. The middle pedal doesn't have a screw. Is that normal or is it missing? Thanks.
Yay, Oshawa! 🇨🇦
Thanks for all this info! Who do you use to tune this instrument? I have a piano tuner, but we aren’t confident in taking out the mechanisms before the tuner comes.
sick!
what did player pianos use before vinyl tubing?
Thank you! =D
My grandparents bought a Baldwin brand new in 1928. And it cost a little over $300. They bought it on an installment plan at around $15 a month. A year later Baldwin lost one of the payments that they made and they didn't have proof because it was Cash mailed in and they had to repay for the same month twice. After that they were adamant on saving every receipt for everything they paid for and I have all those receipts to this day from over a hundred years ago.
Is there a difference between piano brands vs rolls? Are the rolls interchangeable?
Hi Chris…My upright is from 1913 with a loud, bass and treble levers. Do the rolls tell when to use these levers or did the piano player back in the day simply adjust these levers by ear? Also, when you have these player pianos tuned, does something have to be removed? If so, what? Thanks!
It was create and “invent” by ... god ? LoL... but more than a genius one are behind this type of Piano was incredible.... sensational !
An early automated instrument. What did people think when they saw these in a time when maybe the telephone and other things were just beginning to appear or appear only in certain parts of the country? The song sheet or whatever it is reminds me of punch cards that very early computers used (though we may not think of them as computers but brought in the very basic principles of computers today)
Chris, I have two questions, and you might find them weird, but . . . first, loved the video. I wasn't exactly clear about the piano continuing to play when the "foot pumper" stepped away from it. Would the piano still play? And how long does it take a music roll to rewind? Does it depend on the length of the piece? Thank you!
The piano will continue to play for a short time after pumping stops because there is still vacuum in the system. My piano is pretty airtight, so it takes a few seconds. The rewind speed does depend on the speed. Longer rolls will take longer.
To get a little more complicated, the rolls don't rewind or play at a constant rate. As the roll on the spool gets "thicker", the roll actually passes over the tracker bar slightly faster. Think of it like a record, where the outside is actually spinning considerably faster than the inside. This is why the songs actually speed up a little towards the end when playing. This effect can be noticed in many of my videos, especially with the longer rolls.
This reminds me of the scifi short story called "exhalation" about a society of air-powered robots who live on a planet that has a giant reservoir of air inside it and they recharge their lungs at these air pumping stations so that all the pneumatic mechanisms in their bodies can keep working. I always had trouble visualizing what the mechanisms would have looked like, but now i imagine they would be somewhat similar to this piano. It almost seems like a living creature compared to a computer filled with unmoving electronic components 😮
I enjoyed your explanation…essentially.
QUS THE MOB SONG FROM BEAUTY AND THE BEAST 2017 F MAJOR
Does anyone happen to know if some of these types of player pianos were ever refitted later on to also run on electricity, rather than manually pumping the foot pedals? Back when I was a little kid in the '70s, our house had one, and I remember sitting on the bench, pumping the pedals to listen to the songs, but I also have vague memories of it being able to be set up to run on its own, without having to have someone physically operating the pedals. Am I correct, or is my memory just playing tricks on me?
How would I align and set my role? Mine will move left and right and it starts to mess up my paper.
How do you play music without having to press the pedals?
If you mean when I'm playing the piano by hand, the pumping pedals fold up so the normal piano pedals can be used.
If you are referring to the piano playing itself with no pumping, well, it can't. In order for that to work, the piano needs an electric vacuum pump, which mine does not have.
@@ChrisPlaola ok thank you