D***@csiro.au
2008-01-09 11:11:40 UTC
I'm a Steinway bigot, but can't afford one. I want to buy a grand for
an at-home studio. The choice has boiled down to a Kawai GE-30 or a
Petrof IV, but I'm not happy with either.
Petrof has a bad reputation, but at the two dealers who had them the
tone was rock solid better-than-average for the entire keyboard range
from the bottommost to topmost note. They are all the best regulated
pianos I've ever encountered, even better than some new Steinways. Any
comments on Petrof?
On the other hand, the Kawai GE30GEP I like seems to be one of a kind.
It's being sold by a Steinway dealer and I strongly suspect that it
has been heavily re-voiced to appeal to Steinway fans. That makes me
worry a lot about the durability and maintenance of the voice. I tried
Kawais at a Kawai shop and they all sounded typical Kawai, eg. no
pianissimo. Any comments about Kawai revoicing? PS. A Kawai RX-2 at
the Steinway dealership did not sound as sweet as the GE-30.
Boston I won't touch because although the tone quality of the centre
range is superb, that of the outer octaves is very poor. Yamaha I'm
avoiding because the tone quality where the dampers cease leads to an
unpleasant ringing there. I tried three Becksteins, but all three were
badly in need of tuning (each for a different reason). Any comments on
preferred brands on a budget?
an at-home studio. The choice has boiled down to a Kawai GE-30 or a
Petrof IV, but I'm not happy with either.
Petrof has a bad reputation, but at the two dealers who had them the
tone was rock solid better-than-average for the entire keyboard range
from the bottommost to topmost note. They are all the best regulated
pianos I've ever encountered, even better than some new Steinways. Any
comments on Petrof?
On the other hand, the Kawai GE30GEP I like seems to be one of a kind.
It's being sold by a Steinway dealer and I strongly suspect that it
has been heavily re-voiced to appeal to Steinway fans. That makes me
worry a lot about the durability and maintenance of the voice. I tried
Kawais at a Kawai shop and they all sounded typical Kawai, eg. no
pianissimo. Any comments about Kawai revoicing? PS. A Kawai RX-2 at
the Steinway dealership did not sound as sweet as the GE-30.
Boston I won't touch because although the tone quality of the centre
range is superb, that of the outer octaves is very poor. Yamaha I'm
avoiding because the tone quality where the dampers cease leads to an
unpleasant ringing there. I tried three Becksteins, but all three were
badly in need of tuning (each for a different reason). Any comments on
preferred brands on a budget?