...Design
That
Assures
Sweet Singing Tone...
In your mind’s eye, picture a violin.
Four strings fastened
to
the tail (the bottom of the violin) cross
over a bridge and fasten to the tuning pegs at the top. When a string
becomes excited (with the bow or by plucking) it vibrates. The spruce top
of the violin receives the vibrations from the bridge. Singing tone
results.
Now consider the similarities
between the violin and the piano. Instead of four strings, every Rawlins
& Co. piano has two-hundred, twenty-three strings. Look inside the piano
and you will see two bridges. The shorter treble strings will be strung
across the longer treble bridge. Wound bass and tenor strings will be
strung across the shorter bass bridge.
Treble bridges will be placed in the
center, sweet part of the sou
ndboard.
By feathering the lowest part of this bridge it can be fitted under the
plate resulting in even tone quality at the break (the crossover from
tenor strings to treble).
The builder wants to achieve maximum
length of bass and tenor strings. The bass bridge must be placed at the
far end of the soundboard. This placement lies near the piano rim also
called the dead part of the board.
Utilizing intelligent bridge
placement Rawlins & Co. grand and vertical pianos achieve maximum string
length and still affix the bass bridge toward the center, sweet part of
the soundboard. A cantilever apron glued to the bottom of the bridge then
becomes affixed closer to the center of the board. 
Look inside your Rawlins & Co. grand piano and you will see
an additional bridge design that assures sweet singing tone. By slotting
the bride apron, much like the violin-bridge discussed earlier, string
vibrations can be better amplified for rich singing tone at piano (soft)
or forte (loud) and every tonal gradation in between.
♫...rich,
singing tone...
