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With nearly forty years in operation, we are one of the nation's most experienced piano service companies. We handle all your piano's needs, from simple maintenance tunings and action regulation to complete restoration and refinishing that includes new hand-rubbed finishes in the old-world style to bring your piano's natural wooden lustre back to life.

We also specialize in player piano restoration, turning what many would deem worthless wrecks into concert-quality instruments. We also offer installations of the QRS PNOMation3 Digital Player Piano system - the most advanced player technology on the market.
Services
Accutone Piano Service is conveniently located in the heart of the New York State's Finger Lakes region, but we offer our services to a wide area in the Northeast and beyond. Our restoration and refinishing services (including repinning and stringing, and restoring player pianos and installation of PNOMation3 systems) are offered to a broad area of the Northeast and Mid-west, including, but not limited to Western New York State (Greater Buffalo), Eastern New York State (Albany, Schenectady and Troy), Connecticut, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island.
Accutone offers its customers the highest quality tuning. We employ a technique called the "balanced temperament" tuning, which ensures that your piano will sound its very best. We do not employ electronic equipment, but rely on the highly-trained ear of our tuner to give your piano the best tuning it has ever had!
Like all mechanical objects, even the best-built pianos will eventually need maintenance and repairs. The best maintenance is to have your piano tuned regularly and to play it often, since these instruments clearly prefer steady use over neglect. At times, however, more may be needed to keep your piano in prime form.
When you strike your piano's keys, a complex system of levers, springs, and hammers is activated which results in the hammers striking the strings to produce a tone. The mechanical part of the piano which accomplishes this is called the piano's "action". This is comprised of upwards of 9,000 parts that are designed to be adjusted to tolerances of just a few thousandths of an inch.
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