How can i move an upright piano




















If you use planks, lay them along the back wall. Before you move into your new home, makes sure you know exactly where the piano will go. It should be against a wall; preferably an inside wall where it will be protected from the cold and damp. Reverse the steps outlined above. Again, if you have to negotiate stairs, elevators, or a tight space, call a professional.

Each time a piano is moved, it will need to be tuned. While pianos are heavy objects and seem pretty solid, their inner workings are sensitive to movements and bumps. A professional tuner will have it sounding perfect again. Actively scan device characteristics for identification. Use precise geolocation data. Select personalised content. Create a personalised content profile.

Measure ad performance. Select basic ads. Create a personalised ads profile. Select personalised ads. Apply market research to generate audience insights. Besides the danger of a stuck caster, they do not virtually eliminate the weight of the piano for piano moving as is done when it is mounted upon our 4 wheel piano dolly.

So, all in all, any pushing of a piano around on its casters is not a very good idea. However, a bunch of you can lift a piano up a bit and move it around a bit keeping its weight from bearing down upon the casters.

But first lift each corner and check to see that none of them are frozen. Whenever a 4 wheel piano dolly can be used to transport the piano, the muscle power on the part of the crew to move it is reduced to almost nothing. A piano properly balanced on a dolly is effectively almost weightless to move because a light hand pushing it easily overcomes inertia on level surfaces. Below is a picture of a small upright piano properly mounted on its side on a4 wheel dolly.

Notice that no one is holding it. Below is a picture of the same piano properly mounted on its feet on the dolly. Notice that in this centered position, the dolly juts out a bit in front of the piano. This is how the dolly must be placed under the piano in order to balance the weight of its keyboard as well as the weight of its heavy case which contains its cast iron harp. It is very desirable to do as much of the piano moving as possible with as little human effort as possible. So it stands to reason that the dolly is to be used as much as possible.

It is simply the easiest way to move a piano around other than the miles covered when the piano is being transported sitting on a truck. It can be used to move a piano over level ground or on inclines and ramps or for tipping it up or down to get over a curb or 1 step. The piano dolly also can be used to transport the piano on top of plywood or masonite to go over grass, cobblestones, gravel, sand or any other uneven or loose surface.

When doing this, though, always use at least 4 or 5 people to push it and to rotate the plywood or masonite from behind to in front of the piano. So, once the number of people needed on your crew has been determined, the first thing they will have to do with an upright piano is to mount it up onto a dolly. So very thorough instruction in dolly mounting techniques will be given in the dolly mounting section.

To do this, you will use the humpstrap to lift one end of the piano on the dolly welded together as one unit, so to speak, over the step as is shown in the picture sequence below. In the moving industry this is called doing a little cheat because we cheat gravity out of one step of carrying effort without having to take the piano off of the dolly and carry it over that step and then put it back onto the dolly.

Just using a tip of the piano on its feet on the dolly in this manner will not work to cheat more than 1 consecutive step with an upright piano because the bottom edge of the piano on the low side of the tip will scrape the ground, potentially chipping it.

Also, the angle of tip can become too much to keep the piano in balance on the dolly. In order to do bigger cheats up to as many as 4 consecutive low steps or as many as 3 consecutive higher steps at any given point on your move path , a different technique must be utilized.

Then, with the bottom of the upright facing the steps, it is positioned on the dolly up to and if possible over the 1st step as shown in the picture below.

We then finish cheating the other 2 steps by tipping the upright forward so that its bottom is made to lean against the stairs hanging over the top by a foot or two.

Then we just push it up and over and onto the deck. Notice that as the tip begins on this 3 step cheat, we have balanced the upright on the first step, being careful not to let the weak leg touch the stair so as not to break it. Have spotters look out for cracks or separations in the pavement as you roll the piano to the truck ramp.

Avoid these if possible, otherwise push the dolly slowly over them. Push the piano up the truck ramp. Position the two strongest movers at the back end of the piano, another at the lead end, and one alongside the ramp at the back side of the piano. Secure the piano in the truck. Roll the piano against a wall in the truck.

Using moving straps, fasten the piano lengthwise to the support bars or rails along the truck's interior wall. Make sure the straps are tightened to the point that the piano can't be shifted more more than an inch 2. Part 3. Roll the piano out of the truck. Once at your destination, undo the straps that were securing the piano to the truck wall.

At the top of the truck ramp, position two movers at the lead end of the piano, one at the back end, and one alongside the ramp at the back side of the piano. Slowly guide the piano down the ramp. Move it into the new space. Use a stair ramp again if the residence has a high porch, and push the piano up the ramp with two movers at the back end, and one at the lead end guiding it up the ramp. Then slowly lift the dolly wheels one pair at a time over the threshold of the entrance.

Set the piano into place. Carefully move the piano through the new residence to its intended location. Remove the straps or rope that were securing it to the dolly, then push it back against the wall. With one mover on each end of the piano, and a third holding the dolly, lift the piano from a squatting position off the dolly. The person holding the dolly should then pull it back and clear of the piano. The movers at each end can then lower the piano very slowly to the ground.

Hire a professional piano mover, since this is tricky and potentially very dangerous. Not Helpful 29 Helpful It is recommended that you hire a professional piano mover to do this for you.

As long as it doesn't get wet or damp, you should be fine. You need to make sure to secure the piano, too. Not Helpful 0 Helpful 8. Yes, some can. For example, some models of upright pianos have front legs that can be turned to unscrew them from the piano. Not Helpful 1 Helpful 8. Not Helpful 2 Helpful 8. Yes, but this is very dangerous and you shouldn't do it. This would take a lot of people, since you need people on the side on which the piano will be pushed to; people to actually push the piano; and enough people to keep the piano steady while the moving is going on.

Not Helpful 10 Helpful 6. Include your email address to get a message when this question is answered. By using this service, some information may be shared with YouTube.

Pianos can get out of tune when they are moved. It's a good idea to have the piano re-tuned after it is set up again. Helpful 3 Not Helpful 0. To lift your upright piano up or down one step, loop a lifting strap under the leading end of the dolly, behind the wheels, and use it to tip the dolly up or down while someone else holds onto the piano for guidance.

This takes the weight off the movers and utilizes the dolly as a lever for getting the piano past the step. Helpful 1 Not Helpful 2. Avoid bumpy roads and especially potholes when driving to the piano's destination. A bumpy road can cause damage to the piano's internal mechanism, throwing off its tuning.

Helpful 0 Not Helpful 1. Submit a Tip All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published. Avoid using a carpeted dolly. The piano can slip forward and tip with these. Use a rubber capped dolly instead.

Don't roll the piano on its casters, as they are too weak to support the weight of the piano while it is being moved. Helpful 1 Not Helpful 6. Rolling a heavy upright piano can dent wood floors and crack tiles.



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