Sure fire way to do it; this never fails:
1. Suspend instrument high above the floor -- concrete floor is best.
2. Take an extremely expensive, breakable item and suspend it from the slide in such a way that if the slide comes out, the item will fall to the floor and break.
The slide will come right out.
Stuck tuning slide
- SplatterTone
- 5 valves

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TubaRay
- 6 valves

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I don't know if you are statiscally correct or not. However, from my experience, you are absolutely correct.SplatterTone wrote:Sure fire way to do it; this never fails:
1. Suspend instrument high above the floor -- concrete floor is best.
2. Take an extremely expensive, breakable item and suspend it from the slide in such a way that if the slide comes out, the item will fall to the floor and break.
The slide will come right out.
Ray Grim
The TubaMeisters
San Antonio, Tx.
The TubaMeisters
San Antonio, Tx.
- prototypedenNIS
- 3 valves

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batboy, there are a set of tools that you can use... I'll check and see if I can find them in the ferree's catalog when I have time. They are shaped like pliers except instead of jagged teeth, they have round sections that wrap around a slide, allowing you to apply force directly on the ferrule.
You then tap on the plier.
You may find that easier.
You then tap on the plier.
You may find that easier.
denNIS
Salvation Army 1934 and 1954 (Boosey) euph
Salvation Army 1934 and 1954 (Boosey) euph
- windshieldbug
- Once got the "hand" as a cue

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tubamirum
- bugler

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stuck crooks
I keep seeing references to "hot water" being bad for lacquer. I wish it were as it would make stripping a horn a much simpler job. Unfortunately, I haven't been able to strip lacquer with hot water particularly that bLank blank King stuff.
it was fun playing with some of you guys
- windshieldbug
- Once got the "hand" as a cue

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What would you recommend for a third valve slide that had a dent in the outer/inner?bloke wrote:sounds like a few too many "hits". Again, I use my bare hands (as nothing tears up instruments more efficiently than "tools"). I also often first use a careful sideways twisting motion (to break the tubes free in a slightly rotational motion) rather than an outward yanking motion. Frankly (not any sort of brag at all) most people's fingers, hands, and wrists are not strong enough to execute a lot of routine brass repair operations. I don't have well-developed biceps or anything like that...and I'm generally tragically out of shape, but I could probably squeeze water out of steel with my hands.
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
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cheburashka
- bugler

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tubamirum wrote:
I was stripping an Olds trombone, and chemical strippers weren't working at all. I ended up suspending the bell in a big container of boiling water and boiling it for twenty minutes. It did get rid of the lacquer, and it added new meaning to the term "soup bone."I keep seeing references to "hot water" being bad for lacquer. I wish it were as it would make stripping a horn a much simpler job. Unfortunately, I haven't been able to strip lacquer with hot water particularly that bLank blank King stuff.