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- Aug 7, 2013
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I know nothing about pianos. Our neighbor has very generously offered us a piano from her late mother. Is this something we can do ourselves, or do we need to hire someone? I’m assuming it will need to be tuned once it is placed in our home? It measures 56 inches across.
I called around for a quote— $150/hour (and for some reason that rate is what I have to pay for their travel time to the piano and home from our house, as well)! She thinks 2 hours, but wouldn’t guarantee it, of course.
The piano man charges $110 to tune it, which sounds reasonable to me.
Still thinking—this is a big chunk of money to spend for a free piano!![]()
Pianos are very heavy, like VERY heavy. The guys who move pianos professionally have the experience and appropriate equipment to lift and move a piano.
We’ve moved 2 different pianos over the years (a 6ft grand and an upright) 6 times.
The wheels on a piano are for moving it within a room, not for wheeling it out of a house down the driveway to the truck and then repeating the wheeling process at your house. Professional movers use straps to lift the piano up onto a dolly (platform with wheels) and then under control, wheel it. If the pianos “gets away from you” on an incline, it’s gone. You simply can’t hold it, you risk serious injury trying to stop it.
They also have an electric tailgate to lift the piano up into the truck.
Piano removalists charge a few hundred dollars. That is a lot cheaper than strained back, broken foot or damaged piano.
And yes, it will need a tune after moving.
Personally, because pianos can need more than “just a tune” ie re felting or padding, broken hammers, new strings, pedal repair - I’d get a piano tuner to check the piano first. A free piano that needs $1,000 work isn’t a free piano.
Yes, a friend of mine - big bloke 6 ft 5 and really strong, thought he could stop a car that was rolling towards a brick wall (handbrake not on and car not in gear) and he ended up crushed between the wall and car with two broken legs.Good advice!
Incline can mean a very shallow slant in a driveway too. It may be "almost flat" and still make moving it difficult and potentially dangerous. Been there, been pinned to a wall by a piano... I don't suggest it!