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Ask HN: How to build a piano that sounds good after decades of low maintenance?

10 pointsby JabavuAdamsover 3 years ago
Are there existing pianos or designs for acoustic instruments that could survive a shtf scenario? The idea is to require minimal non-specialist maintenance. Should be able to survive being transported in a vehicle over rough terrain, sitting in a bunker for years, or what about a space capsule?

6 comments

missedthecueover 3 years ago
The problem is that the steel piano wire, which is stretched extremely tight, becomes looser over time. There is nothing you can do to counteract this. It&#x27;s just physics. Humidity and temperature will make this worse. The second problem is that a piano literally has over 10 thousand different parts, and many are relatively fragile. You wouldn&#x27;t want to transport that over rough terrain unless you completely disassembled it into a secure carrying case.<p>Your best bet is an electronic piano, which are quite good these days. A Casio could survive everything you list, and would still sound true decades later.
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samwillisover 3 years ago
It seems to me that an instrument that uses tuned mettal bars like a Glockenspiel should be incredible resilient. As long as it is protected from rust it should stay in tune basicly forever. Also packs super small.<p>If you are after something more Piano like then a Celesta would be a good bet, it’s basically a cross between a Piano and a Glockenspiel.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.m.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Celesta" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.m.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Celesta</a><p>Do not dismiss a normal piano though, a steal frame piano should stay in tune for a considerable time under stable temperature and low humidity. Should be achievable in a bunker.
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eternityforestover 3 years ago
All electronic. No springs, use weights and magnets.<p>Power it by solar and LTO batteries. Double or triple redundant key sensors.<p>A full redundant copy of the firmware and automatic checking and repair of anything going bad, or better yet an ASIC(I think a RISCV synth with samples in mask rom could still be cheaper than somw high end pianos...)
jononorover 3 years ago
A kalimba would do pretty well, especially if using a rust resistant metal (ex stainless steel) and humidity resistant body (eg plastic). Some people call them thumb pianos.
sigstoatover 3 years ago
synthetic materials for the action and body will help a bit.<p>using something rust resistant for the harp wouldn’t hurt.<p>not claiming that will do the job. pianos are heavy and more delicate than they appear.
karmakazeover 3 years ago
How about going high-tech and using an auto-tuning mechanism?<p>That seems simpler than whatever exotic methods would be needed to prevent loss of tuning.