I finally went piano shopping today! The trip to the nearest major town is quite expensive due to a large bridge-fee, so unfortunately I rarely have the chance to do this.
I had a thread some time ago: long story short: I NEED a new (grand) piano.
I went to a lot of different stores and tried loads of upright and grand pianos.
Ultimately I decided that an upright is the way to go since I will be moving away from home and won't be able to have a grand. In 10-15 years I will definitely be going for a grand.
To make it short, I did not like most of the stuff i saw. Zimmermann was very decent, Bechstein really nice and Yamaha had good mechanics but i did not like the sound.
I had almost decided on the 125 (4'1") Bechstein Academy when we went to another store that had an old Steinway at half the price of the Bechstein, and it was a 150 cm (4'9") model as well. So really huge.
It sounded and felt seriously good, better than the Bechstein and some of the new Steinway grands as well. It is cheap because it is (in most peoples eyes) quite ugly. The store can't get rid of it.
Anyways, we went to a different store and I tried a Yamaha U3, expecting it to sound like the the others I had tried. It did not. He said he had made the voicing so it sounded very soft (good for romantic music, which I am looking for), and it indeed sounded that way - I really liked it, as much (if not more) as the Bechstein.
It sounded nothing like the other Yamahas I tried, not even the large grands. The touch was nice as well.
As far at the price goes, it was 20% less than the old Steinway. (mentioning prices here doesn't make sense because prices are +200%)
So.. The choice stands between the Steinway and Yamaha. Now here comes the problems and questions:
The Steinway is from 1922, but have had pins and strings replaced so I guess i shouldn't be worried about those. As mentioned i really liked the mechanics, they felt really (!) light, just the way I want it (also covered by the warranty anyways). It came from a pianist, so quite well cared for I'd expect. I appreciate the ivory keys as well, not that they really matter.
BUT, is it too old? I want to keep it for 10-15 years. The seller promised me that the quality of Steinway is sublime and assured me all Steinways last 125-150 years, more than enough for me. The mechanics seemed fine so should I be worried?
Also, after 15 years of use, would it be resellable?
The Yamaha was really nice and so was the price, altough I did like the Steinway better (both sound and feel).
The thing is, if the Steinway will not last me, I will not be able to do anything with it after 5 years. I'll have to buy something new from scratch.
All stores here have a 5 year full return policy as long as I buy a more expensive piano. That way I can buy the Yahama (which is used) and after 5 years exchange it for a new one. After 5 years I can return that and buy a more expensive piano to renew the return again and after 5 years finally buy the grand I ultimately want. That way, although compromising a bit on sound and feel (for possibly a long time), I will keep a chunk of money for the grand (about 1/6 in the end i'm guessing).
(On a side note, the Yamaha will be nearly worthless if I don't use the return policy, right?)
Which is more sensible?