Of
all the components in a pipe organ, nothing
takes a beating more than the console. Be
it heavy-handed organists or simply Father
Time, they all wear out sooner or later. If
your console has any pneumatic parts, this
process gets accelerated. The combination
action usually starts to fail first followed
by the draw knobs or stop tablets. Often times
the instrument itself is in good condition
but the console looks (and feels) like it
had been through the last war. Since this
is the part of the organ that everyone sees,
it is often assumed that since the console
is in bad shape the entire instrument is on
it's last legs. Many an instrument has been
sent to a premature death simply because the
console is shot. What can be done in such
a situation? The worst-case scenario would
be a completely new console. In many cases
this is the best and most practical solution.
But if the wooden shell is in good shape (or
could be stripped down and re-finished) and
the keyboards and pedal board are likewise
in salvageable condition you might be able
to get away with simply rebuilding the console.
Rebuilding an existing console is usually
far cheaper than a totally new one. This can
be especially true if the original console
was of good quality to begin with such as
a Moller or Casavant. The cost of replacing
fine cabinetry can be substantial.
Just what happens when a console gets rebuilt?
Essentially the console becomes completely
solid-state. If your old console had any kind
of pneumatic controls, it no longer will need
a separate wind line going to it. It will
also have one slender cable in its new "umbilical
cord" & instead of a massive bundle of
wires. If your console is on a dolly than
this will make movement much easier. Everything
gets replaced except the keyboards, pedal
board and wooden shell. New contacts are installed
under the keyboards and pedal board as well
as on the expression and crescendo shoes.
New solid-state draw knobs or stop keys are
installed along with new thumb pistons and
toe studs. (If you've ever wanted more pistons
then this is the time to add them.) We install
a new solid-state relay including multi-memory
combination action. You also have the opportunity
of getting such options as a transposer (for
those organists who have trouble transposing
in their heads!) and MIDI capability that
allows synthesizers and other electronic keyboard
instruments to be played through the console.
You can also get record/playback capability
that allows you to play something on the organ
and then go out into the nave and listen while
the organ "plays" it back to you
exactly as you performed it. (Mistakes and
all!) Are you thinking of adding stops at
some point in the future? If there is physically
room, the future additions can be incorporated
into the rebuilt console. Providing at this
time in the new relay for wiring and stop
controls is usually a fraction of the cost
of adding them later on.
So for a fraction of the cost of a new console
you get all the same benefits including reliable
state-of-the-art controls plus a warranty
to cover them. And with the money you save
you can start looking into the future additions
that were prepared for! But that's for another
article!