Trinity Lutheran College (formerly, Lutheran Bible Institute)
Issaquah, Washington

M.P. MÖLLER, Opus 7325, 1946
Glenn D. White, ca. 1965 - Moving to Seattle & Tonal Changes
Unknown, 1980 - Relocation to Issaquah
 
 
GREAT (Expressive)              SWELL (Expressive)              PEDAL (Expressive)
   8    Spitz Principal            8     Gedeckt                   16  Sub Bass
   8    Gedeckt                    4     Principal                 8   Gedeckt
   4    Spitz Octave               4     Gedeckt                   4   Choral Bass
   4    Gedeckt                    2-2/3 Nazard                    4   Gedeckt
   2    Fifteenth                  2     Octave                    2   Twenty Second
   2    Gedeckt                    1-3/5 Tierce
   1    Twenty Second                    Tremolo
                                         removed tablet
                                         removed tablet


STOP / RANK / PIPE ANALYSIS
   16    Sub Bass                (Ped)  12  Extension of the 8’ Gedeckt.
   8     Spitz Principal          (Gt)  --  1-12 from 8' Gedeckt; 13-61 from 4' Spitz
                                               Octave.
   8     Gedeckt           (Gt/Sw/Ped)  61
   4     Spitz Octave             (Gt)  49  Top 8ve from the 4' Gedeckt. Originally
                                               called Octave Conique.
   4     Choral Bass             (Ped)  --  Same as the 4' Spitz Octave.
   4     Principal                (Sw)  --  1-12 from 4' Gedeckt; 13-61 from 2' Octave.
   4     Gedeckt           (Gt/Sw/Ped)  12  Extension of the 8’ Gedeckt. Top 5 pipes
                                               break back to 8' pitch.
   2-2/3 Nazard                   (Sw)  --  From the Gedeckt unit. Breaks back to 4'
                                               pitch at c# 50; and 8' pitch at g# 57.
   2     Fifteenth                (Gt)  --  Same as the 2' Octave.
   2     Octave                   (Sw)  61  Was the original 4' Salicet. Top 4 pipes
                                               break back to 4' pitch.
   2     Twenty Second           (Ped)  --  From the 4' Spitz Octave.
   2     Gedeckt                  (Gt)  --  From the Gedeckt unit. Breaks back to 4'
                                               pitch at g# 45; and to 8' pitch at
                                               g# 57.
   1-3/5 Tierce  (tc)             (Sw)  --  13-40 from Gedeckt unit. 41-53 from 2'
                                               Octave. 54-57 break back.
   1     Twenty Second            (Gt)  --  From the 2' Octave. Breaks back to 2'
                                               pitch at a 46, and to 4' pitch at a 54.
         Tremolo                  (Sw)      Affects entire organ.
 
 
PIPE SUMMARY

   16' Gedeckt                4' Spitz Octave                2' Octave
       85 pipes                  49 pipes                       61 pipes


                                       PEDAL MOVEMENTS
                                  Expression     (balanced)
                                  Crescendo      (balanced)

ACTION: E-P unit        VOICES: 3       STOPS: 18       RANKS: 3       PIPES: 195


NOTES
This organ originally built for the 1904 edifice of Mountain View Lutheran Church in
Puyallup, WA.  It was relocated to the Lutheran Bible Institute of Seattle ca. 1965
by Glenn D. White of Seattle with tonal changes.

The original 4' Octave Conique was revoiced.  The original 16-8-4 Gedeckt remained un-
changed.  And the original 4' Salicet was cut-down, de-bearded, and revoiced as a 2'
Octave. The stoplist was altered as a result of the tonal changes. The original blower
was replaced with a new Meidinger blower from Switzerland.

When LBI moved to Issaquah to the former campus of Providence Heights College, the
Möller was moved-along and re-installed in the Rainier Room where it remained until
its removal by Jim Stettner of Puget Sound Pipe Organs in 2008 when LBI (since renamed
Trinity Lutheran College) down-sized and relocated to the old Bon Marche building in
Everett, WA.

Sources: Möller opus list; JRS; extant organ

 [Received from James R. Stettner 2016-07-17.]