All this conversation about different solders, flux, masks, etc. Makes me think I am doing something wrong....... No, I'm pretty sure I know what I am doing. I have been known to perform some of the most extensive repair out there and I only use 70/30 and Nokorode paste flux. Silver-solder or brazing? sure, all the time. Now and then I will use a lead free or low temp silver bearing solder for piston port repairs in order to avoid plating problems that lead solder can cause when building up a piston for a valve job. Fill gaps and voids? I don't do that, it goes against my grain and I don't offer it to my clients. The job is in to be "repaired" i.e. damage corrected properly. I guess I suck at cutting corners, oh well.
If you offer bargain basement and cut-rate, thats the kind of work you get, over and over.
Advice to me when I was an apprentice was to simply learn how to make a good proper fitting joint, if it is distorted, correct it, if it means spending an additional half hour to get it right, don't piss and moan about it, (whiny voice " I'm not getting paid enough to do this kind of work") just shut up and do it. Silver plate? same process, but with a little more care. Not rocket science, just lots of practice until you have it down pat. I know, there are all sorts of aids such as masks and heat fences and I have experimented with a lot of them. I have found none that out perform mastering the control of heat and good preparation.
Brass band instrument repair skills that must be mastered are:
Soldering and brazing
Dent work
Polishing and buffing, A chimp can spray lacquer.
The above are the things you MUST fully understand if you want to repair brass. It will take years to get it down and it will take longer to develop personal standards of quality. I had those standards hammered into my thick skull by craftsmen who new there sh** and that was the toughest part of all. Just like learning to play an instrument, the more study and practice you do the better you will get.
Daniel C. Oberloh
Oberloh Woodwind and Brass Works
www.oberloh.com