Lapping Pistons at Home (Caution)

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windshieldbug
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Re: Lapping Pistons at Home (Caution)

Post by windshieldbug »

iiipopes wrote:Likewise, a sticky valve can be dried beer from the Oktoberfest gig that just needs cleaning
That beer can dry there!? You mean I've been spinning my leaky valves all these years with a power drill for no reason!?!? :shock: :wink:
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Dan Schultz
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Re: Lapping Pistons at Home (Caution)

Post by Dan Schultz »

windshieldbug wrote:
iiipopes wrote:Likewise, a sticky valve can be dried beer from the Oktoberfest gig that just needs cleaning
That beer can dry there!? You mean I've been spinning my leaky valves all these years with a power drill for no reason!?!? :shock: :wink:
Beer residue is a minor problem compared to bratwurst and sauerkraut. Rotary valves are A LOT more forgiving when it comes to passing kraut! :shock:

soooo.... Pistons for Dixieland music. Rotors for German music!
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Re: Lapping Pistons at Home (Caution)

Post by iiipopes »

I knew you guys would get a kick out of that one. Personal experience from a picnic gig last August.
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Re: Lapping Pistons at Home (Caution)

Post by sungfw »

Rick Denney wrote:Rick "not seeing power drills lying around good repair shops--for a reason" Denney
Hmm ...
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Re: Lapping Pistons at Home (Caution)

Post by windshieldbug »

Rick Denney wrote:"not seeing power drills lying around good repair shops--for a reason"
...ah, because they're all in use!? :shock: :)
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Re: Lapping Pistons at Home (Caution)

Post by Rick Denney »

MTuba wrote:...but I lapped mine successfully and didn’t commit any of the disastrous damage that has been warned of by others in several of the preceeding posts.
Here's the problem with risky practices: Sometimes they work, and sometimes they don't. That's why they are described as risky, and not as flat-out wrong. Your sample of one may represent a low-risk method, a high-risk method with appropriate common sense, or a high-risk method with a good dose of luck. A sample of one does not reveal which of these possibilities ruled the day.

I am not a repair technician. But being self-taught with a range of tools has resulted in making many of the possible mistakes one can make that don't result in loss of body parts. For (entertaining) example, I tried to drill a hole through carpet recently. The drill was turning at a very low speed, and I was being a careful as possible. In about one quarter of a second, without me realizing it, the drill bit pulled a thread and unraveled about a 3-inch-round patch of the carpet and wrapped it into a ball around the drill bit. Most people with common sense (but lacking specific experience) wouldn't have seen that coming--I didn't.

A power drill at low speed has a lot of torque. If the valve binds (and it will as soon as the toothpaste dries, which it will perhaps even before one realizes it), the drill has the power to pry itself out of the user's hand (at which point it's heavy enough to bend or break the valve stem), or, if the user has big and strong hands like I do, to tear the stem off the valve. Just because it didn't happen to you doesn't mean that common sense is enough to prevent it, or that it isn't a significant risk. Frankly, what you describe violated my own common sense, and who's to say your common sense, or the common sense you assume of your (often quite inexperienced) readers, is better than mine?

Most people don't realize that valves and valve casings lose their roundness as they wear. If they don't know that, then they won't know that spinning the valve in the case is not always a good idea. When Dan or any other qualified technician laps in a valve by spinning it, I assure you that they have already tested the roundness, and that they have also already considered their reasons for taking that approach.

Do not break the rules before learning them.

I am a proponent of home repairs, having, for example, long advocated the use of Du-Bro ball links for rotary valve linkages. I even created a web page about it. The most powerful power tool I used was a Dremel tool with a cut-off wheel or a small drill bit. Most times when I drill a hole in a tuba, though, I use a pin vise and do it by hand. The pros use a lathe, but owning and knowing how to use a lathe are far beyond the skills of the type of person to whom you made your recommendation.

If you want to spin a valve in the casing using a safer method (after you are sure that spinning it is a sensible thing to do), then insert a tight-fitting rubber hose over the stem, and spin it between your hands as you rub them back and forth. If it binds, the hose will slip or wind up instead of tearing something apart. And you won't be able to spin it fast enough to make anything hot. That's how I was trained to lap in intake valves on an engine, for example. We never used power drills for those, either, and those are made of steel.

Actually, my repair tech did indeed suggest the use of Lava soap if I needed to lap in my tuning slides if they proved too stiff for my taste. But that recommendation was made on the basis of two facts: 1.) The tech knows me and knows my capabilities (and their limitations), and 2.) the tech KNOWS that the slides are round and perfectly aligned, which are an essential requirement before lapping can do anything but harm. He DID NOT suggest that I lap the valves, though he did warn me that his valve jobs were tight and would need frequent oiling and good cleanliness to avoid sticking. I observe his warning and they do not stick.

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Re: Lapping Pistons at Home (Caution)

Post by Rick Denney »

MTuba wrote:As this has been going on for several days in a row now, I am beginning to tire from the process, but before completing my case for home repairs, I’d like to point out more of what I believe to be inaccuracies that are still being presented for the reader to consider.
I just erased my long response, which I should not have written at all.

If you want to chuck up a soft brass valve stem in a power drill, be my guest--you know your own skills and limitations best. Others have seen my cautions, and can judge for themselves. I think it was apparent, for example, that I wasn't basing my caution on the use of the trigger lock. By the way, a small sample doesn't cause chance, but may reflect it. That's the problem with small samples. But you knew that.

Keep contributing, but please don't take it personally when people express more caution than you concerning what may be hidden risks.

Rick "wondering where the accusation of emotional attack came from" Denney
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Re: Lapping Pistons at Home (Caution)

Post by sungfw »

MTuba wrote:As this has been going on for several days in a row now, I am beginning to tire from the process, but before completing my case for home repairs, I’d like to point out more of what I believe to be inaccuracies that are still being presented for the reader to consider.
Sorry, but the ONLY inaccuracy I've found in this thread is your minimizing or outright dismissing the risks inherent in the procedure. Every risk identified by other posters is a real risk. Granted, there are ways of minimizing or mitigating the risks, but the risks remain real.

Yes, I did, in fact, lap a single valve on my euph using toothpaste and a power drill, and GOT AWAY WITH IT, but:

1) I took a calculated risk, recognizing full well that I stood a very good chance of screwing up the piston, the valve casing, or both;

2) both techs who had previously worked on the valve assured me that it was not bent or damaged, and that the casing was not out of round to a meaningful degree;

3) I have access, through a friend, to a metalworking shop that has the equipment to ensure that—barring catastrophic failure of the equipment—the drill could not pitch, yaw, or roll, that piston was precisely aligned with the valve casing, and that it remained aligned throughout the lapping procedure;

4) the fix is "good enough" for the purposes for which I use the horn (Christmas Tubas, Red Kettle Band, etc.);

had the horn been my only horn or my primary horn, or had (2) or (3) not been the case, or had I not known that I could get a new replacement valve piston and valve block for a reasonable price, NOTHING could have induced me to take the risk.
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Re: Lapping Pistons at Home (Caution)

Post by J.c. Sherman »

To all of this, I will once again say:

Brass is soft - that's the reason they make brass instruments out of it.

Anything you do to it and around it changes it. It's alive, it moves, it changes. Any repair is a risk. You can take chances if you want. But I (and others) don't think the risk is a good one. Some of us have experience to back that up.

Brass is soft. Take whatever risks you wish or think you can afford. I and others are here to take you money when things don't work out.

:-)

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Re: Lapping Pistons at Home (Caution)

Post by windshieldbug »

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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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