wandamusic@... wrote: > Paul, > > I teach at a university where we have had the "university piano > sales". I hate to say it, but to me the sales sound like an excuse for > a sale. Just like "presidents day" or "Julyi 4th special". For a grand > piano, and especially a disklavier, where the list price is so much > higher, I'd expect a bit more off. I am guessing this is a piano in > the 20k - 30k range? Or even more? I don't know by model numbers for > sure, if it is a grand, but if it is, that makes it a big number to > begin with. Yamaha don't make MarkIV uprights. Apparently those of us without space for a grand aren't worthy of the technology! As for prices, you can look at this in two ways: you should be able to get a big discount because it is a secondhand piano that has had lots of grubby students putting their hands on the instrument, or that you get an instrument that has been played in (and probably played in over the entire range at that). Personally, I'd buy on tone and feel rather than on whether it was secondhand or not. > I believe we are not supposed to post what we paid for an instrument, > not sure if this will be allowed through....but I'd just say > generally, for a "floor model" or "demo" or "last years model" of > ANYTHING, I expect a price significantly below the absolute possible > bestest lowest price that anyone could get a new one in a store. If > not, what is the point? Unless the item is the last one of its kind > and you absolutely need that particular one, you probably can do the > same 5K off for new. On this list anything goes - Yamaha don't like the price being posted on the dug mailing list, but the Yahoo and Google groups are Yahoo run. There is even a spreadsheet of prices in the Yahoo groups files section I think
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Re: [disklavier] Re:College loan prices
2007-11-04 by James Fry
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