After a rehearsal tonight with my university's marching band, I discovered a beautiful Yamaha sousaphone in the storage cabinet that seems basically untouched! People apparently don't like to use it because the fiberglass ones are lighter, but this thing is basically pristine, has a longer neck (which works well for me, because I'm on the tall side) and has a really big sound--at least on the fundamental (see next paragraph). I'd be happy to put up with a little shoulder pain if I could play a horn as nice as this one on a regular basis. (no pics, sorry)
The PROBLEM is that all of the valves are completely immovable. They must have sealed up because people left the thing idle for such a long time. I unscrewed one of the valve caps and the whole thing seems dried up on the inside.
This thing is really nice, so I definitely don't want to risk damaging it by doing something amateurish and stupid. Could somebody give me a few recommendations on how to properly unstick the valves without hurting the horn? I apologize if there's already a thread for this, since it seems like a common problem; i just couldn't locate it with a search for "unstick valve". (The slides probably need to be pulled, but I have a little more experience dealing with that.)
Thanks,
-Sous-Chef-Phone






