Alina Y118 444 Custom Access
But the piano has quirks. The "Custom" badge on the cheek block isn't a decal; it's a hand-engraved signature of the assembler, each one different. The pedals are weighted 30% heavier than normal—a deliberate choice to prevent over-pedaling, or so Pavel's notebook suggests. And the middle "sostenuto" pedal? On a 444 Custom, it drops a felt strip between the hammers and strings, not to mute, but to create a glassy, harmonics-only "corpse echo" used in no other instrument.
At ppp (pianissimo), the Y118 444 Custom whispers—not a timid, woolly murmur, but a crystalline shimmer, as though the strings are made of frozen light. At fff (fortissimo), it doesn't just get loud. It snarls . The bass growls with a guttural authority that belongs on a 9-foot concert grand, while the treble cuts like a diamond-edged scalpel. There’s no metallic harshness, just raw, controlled fury. The sustain is infamous: play a chord, walk away to brew coffee, and return to find it still hovering in the air like an unresolved question. Alina Y118 444 Custom
In the world of acoustic pianos, the name "Alina" usually conjures images of serviceable, mass-produced student uprights—reliable, unoffensive, and forgettable. But every few decades, a ghost rolls off the assembly line. A mistake. A rebellion. That ghost is the Alina Y118 444 Custom . But the piano has quirks
Legend among restoration techs says that only 17 of these were ever made in a clandestine 1996 production run at Alina's shuttered Czech factory. The official story: a batch of rejected soundboards, deemed too wild in their grain density, were slated for the incinerator. But a rogue foreman, a man named Pavel who allegedly moonlighted as a concert tuner for closed sanatoriums, saw potential. He paired those boards with hammers struck not with standard felt, but with a felt-kevlar blend sourced from military surplus. And the middle "sostenuto" pedal
If you ever see one, resist the urge to play Chopsticks . The Y118 444 Custom has been known to answer back.