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briantrumpet

briantrumpet

Legendary Member
I don't know NY at all, but on the face of it, in a city with a grid system, this seems eminently sensible: proper segregation.

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First Aspect

Veteran
I don't know NY at all, but on the face of it, in a city with a grid system, this seems eminently sensible: proper segregation.

View attachment 10891
30 years ago Vancouver just created a load of no through roads with kerbs a Ross moat of one end of a block with a gap for cyclists, all in a straight line. As these were parallel to main routes motorists barely noticed, it created quieter streets for the people living on them and created a super fast and virtually traffic free bike corridor, because the furthest any car on any block would go would be one block (about 200m).

This sort of stuff isnt complicated or new.
 
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briantrumpet

briantrumpet

Legendary Member
30 years ago Vancouver just created a load of no through roads with kerbs a Ross moat of one end of a block with a gap for cyclists, all in a straight line. As these were parallel to main routes motorists barely noticed, it created quieter streets for the people living on them and created a super fast and virtually traffic free bike corridor, because the furthest any car on any block would go would be one block (about 200m).

This sort of stuff isnt complicated or new.

Thanks. But 'War On Motorists', obvs...
 
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All uphill

Senior Member
Their genius goes right from the design through to quality control on what gets shipped out of the factories, hand-finishing and all. I'd hope that other large sprawling corporations would study how Yamaha do it and take note.

We have a Yamaha electric piano (white, naturally). After ten years it started playing up; we contacted Yamaha and they made an appointment for one of their guys to visit us and check it. He fixed it, said "No charge" and left. Amazing service.

Just one question he couldn't help with, the Yamaha is an epiano, what should we call the old Broadwood? Acoustic piano?
 

First Aspect

Veteran
We have a Yamaha electric piano (white, naturally). After ten years it started playing up; we contacted Yamaha and they made an appointment for one of their guys to visit us and check it. He fixed it, said "No charge" and left. Amazing service.

Just one question he couldn't help with, the Yamaha is an epiano, what should we call the old Broadwood? Acoustic piano?
Analogue piano.
 

Bazzer

Über Member
We have a Yamaha electric piano (white, naturally). After ten years it started playing up; we contacted Yamaha and they made an appointment for one of their guys to visit us and check it. He fixed it, said "No charge" and left. Amazing service.

Just one question he couldn't help with, the Yamaha is an epiano, what should we call the old Broadwood? Acoustic piano?
Our eldest daughter's was purchased over 25 years ago and continues to play faultlessly, despite some keyboard abuse by our grand daughter.
 
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briantrumpet

briantrumpet

Legendary Member
Just one question he couldn't help with, the Yamaha is an epiano, what should we call the old Broadwood?

'Out of tune', if it's like the Broadwoods I've come across.

Joking aside, yes, 'acoustic' if you want to be clear it's not electric.

Where we were on our music residential last week, they had one 9ft Steinway concert grand (new cost about £130k) and a 6ft Bösendorfer (about the same) in the music department. Both glorious instruments, but you'd expect them to be, at that price.
 

AuroraSaab

Pharaoh
Their guitars are the same. Even the bottom end £100 acoustics are decent. Cnc manufacturing has made it easier obviously but Yamaha finish quality has always been good.
 
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