Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
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Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
Okay, I don't really know how to start this, but here goes:
I'm a college-age trombonist looking to repair my current horn, a Bach 42BO purchased new in 2017 from my local band shop at a big sales event. Now, a year later, the slide is fighting back a little bit! Not sure if it's because of faulty construction or whatnot, but I've done a lot to try and get this slide back up and running: switched cases because I thought a ProTEC one was so small it was warping it, brought it to a local trusted repairsperson on three occasions, twice for dent/alignment check and once for an ultrasonic cleaning, and I sent it to the Slide Doctor in between all this. All in all, 6th position still feels rusty and, on bad days, if I leave the slide in 7th, it'll just sit there, rock solid.
I am exhausted. I don't know where to turn, I've spent copious amounts of money totaling almost the value of the slide at this point, and I'm at the point where I'm looking at selling some old horns to scrape the money up to buy a slide from a reputable company such as Edwards or Shires. I feel insane: am I doing something wrong?
I figured out a lot of the resistance I was getting from the slide was due to my usage of slide cream and me not being diligent about cleaning it off! I thought I could skirt by but that didn't work out, so I'm back to Slide-O (Black Cap). I now clean it twice a week with the good old cheese cloth rod, but even this is beginning to lose its effectiveness, and I'm now applying lubricant almost every half an hour and a quarter of a spray bottle of water to keep the slide barely working.
Things I haven't tried: Using Dawn dish soap as a grease remover, getting actual cheese cloth instead of old rags and using new cheese cloth every time I clean
I know I can do something! But I'm distressed at the moment.
I'm a college-age trombonist looking to repair my current horn, a Bach 42BO purchased new in 2017 from my local band shop at a big sales event. Now, a year later, the slide is fighting back a little bit! Not sure if it's because of faulty construction or whatnot, but I've done a lot to try and get this slide back up and running: switched cases because I thought a ProTEC one was so small it was warping it, brought it to a local trusted repairsperson on three occasions, twice for dent/alignment check and once for an ultrasonic cleaning, and I sent it to the Slide Doctor in between all this. All in all, 6th position still feels rusty and, on bad days, if I leave the slide in 7th, it'll just sit there, rock solid.
I am exhausted. I don't know where to turn, I've spent copious amounts of money totaling almost the value of the slide at this point, and I'm at the point where I'm looking at selling some old horns to scrape the money up to buy a slide from a reputable company such as Edwards or Shires. I feel insane: am I doing something wrong?
I figured out a lot of the resistance I was getting from the slide was due to my usage of slide cream and me not being diligent about cleaning it off! I thought I could skirt by but that didn't work out, so I'm back to Slide-O (Black Cap). I now clean it twice a week with the good old cheese cloth rod, but even this is beginning to lose its effectiveness, and I'm now applying lubricant almost every half an hour and a quarter of a spray bottle of water to keep the slide barely working.
Things I haven't tried: Using Dawn dish soap as a grease remover, getting actual cheese cloth instead of old rags and using new cheese cloth every time I clean
I know I can do something! But I'm distressed at the moment.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
Perhaps sending it to a reputable slide guru would help. Several on TC here.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
What did Ray say about it? Usually he's pretty responsive about your slide after he's worked on it. I found that it took a week after Ray got his hands on it for it to get back into good shape when I had a procedure done on one of my Shires slides. But suddenly one application of trombotine later and the slide was like glass. I was actually really disappointed with his work because it seemed worse than when i sent it to him but he assured me that it was just a heavily corroded slide and to give it time He was right!
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
True words Matt; Ray will answer questions pre/post work and he is a great guy in general. Also, he polishes the inside of outer tubes tubes on every slide he does. So, at first it is scratchy. It's akin to getting a chemical clean.Matt K wrote: ↑Thu Jun 07, 2018 11:08 pm What did Ray say about it? Usually he's pretty responsive about your slide after he's worked on it. I found that it took a week after Ray got his hands on it for it to get back into good shape when I had a procedure done on one of my Shires slides. But suddenly one application of trombotine later and the slide was like glass. I was actually really disappointed with his work because it seemed worse than when i sent it to him but he assured me that it was just a heavily corroded slide and to give it time He was right!
Assuming the slide is mechanically sound. It could be the use of the two different lubricants. For instance Slide-O-Mix, by design I believe, stays on the slide surfaces. This can leave a residue even after a thorough/traditional cleaning. Apparently cream type lubricants and S-O-M react to each other. After a few minutes of playing the slide action starts to feel gummy. The Slide Doctor, Ray Splawn uses Wright’s Brass Polish and a cleaning rod and polishes/cleans the inside of the outer tubes. Then rinse and wash as per usual. This will remove build up from lubricants and tarnish. I had the same problem with a Bach 42 slide, where the previous owner only used Slide-O-Mix—even though the horn was immaculate clean and taken care of. I realize you went the opposite route, but it sounds to familiar to be coincidence. In general Slide-O-Mix can gum-up, even without the presence of another lubricant. With S-O-M, cleaning through the mechanical action of a cleaning rod just isn't enough. Here’s a link to the video: http://slidedr.com/instructional-videos ... xoisVMvzVq
As Matt suggested, definitely call Ray. If anything were mechanically wrong (warped tubes, etc) Ray would have informed you.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
Well, for one thing, ANY slide in 6th & 7th position most likely WON"T move on it's own! You're fighting against gravity at that point with the 3 feet of outer slide basically rotating downward on the end of 3 feet of flimsy inner slide tubes!!
And unless you leave your slide in the trunk of your car during a Texas summer & let the cream bake into your slide, your use of slide cream is not the problem here.
How does it move from 1-4?
Lastly, unless you have a LOT of experience working on slides, you're really at the end of what you can do to repair it!
Either send it back the Ray, or to another experienced slide tech, myself included.
Eric
And unless you leave your slide in the trunk of your car during a Texas summer & let the cream bake into your slide, your use of slide cream is not the problem here.
How does it move from 1-4?
Lastly, unless you have a LOT of experience working on slides, you're really at the end of what you can do to repair it!
Either send it back the Ray, or to another experienced slide tech, myself included.
Eric
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
I don't have his reply papers on me, but I do remember him confirming my fears that the tubes were too close together and slightly disaligned. Now that I think about it, it did feel better once returning from him, but the tubes still appeared and still appear today a bit disaligned, however this may just be a fear of mine. It's hard to tell.Matt K wrote: ↑Thu Jun 07, 2018 11:08 pm What did Ray say about it? Usually he's pretty responsive about your slide after he's worked on it. I found that it took a week after Ray got his hands on it for it to get back into good shape when I had a procedure done on one of my Shires slides. But suddenly one application of trombotine later and the slide was like glass. I was actually really disappointed with his work because it seemed worse than when i sent it to him but he assured me that it was just a heavily corroded slide and to give it time He was right!
Ray did inform me, and I understand your point. I've been on a Slide-O only diet for a couple months now, and it was working great at first, but went downhill from there. Most people I've asked around the area confirm that residue issues with slide creams and Trombotine are definitely more prevalent than with Slide-O, which, according to the repairswoman to which I brought my horn last year, "is essentially soap."LarryPrestonRoberson wrote: ↑Fri Jun 08, 2018 12:52 am
True words Matt; Ray will answer questions pre/post work and he is a great guy in general. Also, he polishes the inside of outer tubes tubes on every slide he does. So, at first it is scratchy. It's akin to getting a chemical clean.
Assuming the slide is mechanically sound. It could be the use of the two different lubricants. For instance Slide-O-Mix, by design I believe, stays on the slide surfaces. This can leave a residue even after a thorough/traditional cleaning. Apparently cream type lubricants and S-O-M react to each other. After a few minutes of playing the slide action starts to feel gummy. The Slide Doctor, Ray Splawn uses Wright’s Brass Polish and a cleaning rod and polishes/cleans the inside of the outer tubes. Then rinse and wash as per usual. This will remove build up from lubricants and tarnish. I had the same problem with a Bach 42 slide, where the previous owner only used Slide-O-Mix—even though the horn was immaculate clean and taken care of. I realize you went the opposite route, but it sounds to familiar to be coincidence. In general Slide-O-Mix can gum-up, even without the presence of another lubricant. With S-O-M, cleaning through the mechanical action of a cleaning rod just isn't enough. Here’s a link to the video: http://slidedr.com/instructional-videos ... xoisVMvzVq
As Matt suggested, definitely call Ray. If anything were mechanically wrong (warped tubes, etc) Ray would have informed you.
While I do think there's a good prospect of those products working, I've dropped almost $500-600 dollars on this slide with various things intended to up its performance. While I do want to take the chance, as I continually hear fantastic things about Ray and his work, I think it might be time to simply purchase a new slide and sell this one.
I'll try and send Ray a ping!Bonearzt wrote: ↑Fri Jun 08, 2018 9:21 am Well, for one thing, ANY slide in 6th & 7th position most likely WON"T move on it's own! You're fighting against gravity at that point with the 3 feet of outer slide basically rotating downward on the end of 3 feet of flimsy inner slide tubes!!
And unless you leave your slide in the trunk of your car during a Texas summer & let the cream bake into your slide, your use of slide cream is not the problem here.
How does it move from 1-4?
Lastly, unless you have a LOT of experience working on slides, you're really at the end of what you can do to repair it!
Either send it back the Ray, or to another experienced slide tech, myself included.
Eric
Update: I've attempted to clean the slide with a Cascade (with a Dawn grease-fighting component) dish detergent from the pantry, which apparently contained some strange kind of salt which got all in my slide and, after cleaning it, the slide performs worse than before.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
What did you do with your slide?
If you tried to use Cascade dishwasher detergent as is, it' supposed to be diluted in HOT water (too hot for Bach lacquer!!!).
You should have used a regular dishwashing detergent (the type you use in a sink). Diluted to regular working strength (i.e. a capful to a bucket of WARM -- 100 F -- water).
You may need to do a long soak in warm water to try to dissolve the sodium phosphate (one of several varieties) crystals. I'll have to do a little research to figure out what you could use to try to help dissolve the crystals -- maybe ammonia will help.
If you tried to use Cascade dishwasher detergent as is, it' supposed to be diluted in HOT water (too hot for Bach lacquer!!!).
You should have used a regular dishwashing detergent (the type you use in a sink). Diluted to regular working strength (i.e. a capful to a bucket of WARM -- 100 F -- water).
You may need to do a long soak in warm water to try to dissolve the sodium phosphate (one of several varieties) crystals. I'll have to do a little research to figure out what you could use to try to help dissolve the crystals -- maybe ammonia will help.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
I just hosed it out with a medium-high pressure hose and that seems to have somewhat taken care of the problem; the crystals seemed to have dissolved on their own with room temperature water? At any rate that does not seem to be an issue any longer!BGuttman wrote: ↑Fri Jun 08, 2018 10:52 am What did you do with your slide?
If you tried to use Cascade dishwasher detergent as is, it' supposed to be diluted in HOT water (too hot for Bach lacquer!!!).
You should have used a regular dishwashing detergent (the type you use in a sink). Diluted to regular working strength (i.e. a capful to a bucket of WARM -- 100 F -- water).
You may need to do a long soak in warm water to try to dissolve the sodium phosphate (one of several varieties) crystals. I'll have to do a little research to figure out what you could use to try to help dissolve the crystals -- maybe ammonia will help.
Update 2: I did get myself some real dish soap and it seems to have worked! Dawn 4x Grease-Cutting Strength seems to be the winner!
Following that episode, I re-applied Slide-O and water, and the slide became rock solid again. Rinsed it all off, back to square two. I may try applying the slide grease that I was using before (not Trombotine, it came with the Bach horn in the case). I also just found out there's a little bottle that's supposed to be applied along with the slide cream? The bottle is important?
As a final question (thanks to everyone for responding with such haste!), does anyone know the ingredients to this mysterious Bach slide cream? Or SuperSlick for that matter? I hear Trombotine is vegetable-based and I'm always into the organic stuff.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
Forgot one: this friction isn't because of moisture in the slide is it? For the past few months I've noted that adding water almost always slows down my slide in any quantity. Additionally, my slide seems to work best when very dry and with a medium coating of lubricant. Is this normal?
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
First, the small bottle of SOM is to be applied before the large bottle. You put a couple of drops on each stocking and work it in. Then you apply a few drops of the large bottle. You "refresh" the SOM with more drops from the large bottle.
Bach Slide Cream is probably the same stuff as Conn Formula 3. Superslick is a little different. For all three you would apply a small amount of cream, work it into the stockings, then a drop or two of the bottle of oil (the small bottle of SOM works too). To see how to properly apply cream, check out Christan Griego's video on how to clean a slide. It's on the Edwards site, and I embedded it in another post on here.
Bach Slide Cream is probably the same stuff as Conn Formula 3. Superslick is a little different. For all three you would apply a small amount of cream, work it into the stockings, then a drop or two of the bottle of oil (the small bottle of SOM works too). To see how to properly apply cream, check out Christan Griego's video on how to clean a slide. It's on the Edwards site, and I embedded it in another post on here.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
If anything, you need MORE water! In larger drops!cyteakparagon wrote: ↑Fri Jun 08, 2018 2:26 pm Forgot one: this friction isn't because of moisture in the slide is it? For the past few months I've noted that adding water almost always slows down my slide in any quantity. Additionally, my slide seems to work best when very dry and with a medium coating of lubricant. Is this normal?
The water droplets are what the slide actually rides on in combination with the cream!
The misters don't apply enough water, you need a good stream!
Eric
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
One thing that has really helped keep my slide in shape (and a tech can correct/delete this post if I'm wrong) is that when you swab it out with a cleaning rod, you need to do it straight, and fairly aggressively.
Obviously you don't want to warp your slide, but if I remember correctly on the Edwards website it says to swab until the outers are warm to the touch (a LOT of friction). It really clears off any slide cream/oil buildup on the outers which can make the slide feel dented or sticky.
I know too many of my friends that used to swab one or two strokes lightly and consider that 'clean' when that doesn't actually do anything. I've done this with my Edwards slide for the last few years and I don't have any serious issues.
One thing that helps is that I use muslin instead of cheesecloth because it builds slightly more friction than the cheesecloth you buy at your local Target.
Obviously you don't want to warp your slide, but if I remember correctly on the Edwards website it says to swab until the outers are warm to the touch (a LOT of friction). It really clears off any slide cream/oil buildup on the outers which can make the slide feel dented or sticky.
I know too many of my friends that used to swab one or two strokes lightly and consider that 'clean' when that doesn't actually do anything. I've done this with my Edwards slide for the last few years and I don't have any serious issues.
One thing that helps is that I use muslin instead of cheesecloth because it builds slightly more friction than the cheesecloth you buy at your local Target.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
For me, adding water increases the slide speed by maybe 3%, and reduces the lube longevity by maybe 3000%.
But it does depend a bit on what I'm using. With SOM or Yamasnit, water makes my slide a tiny bit faster, but I have to reapply much sooner. With Superslick or other cream water has more effect on speed. It also washes off the lube faster, but the effect is less.
But it does depend a bit on what I'm using. With SOM or Yamasnit, water makes my slide a tiny bit faster, but I have to reapply much sooner. With Superslick or other cream water has more effect on speed. It also washes off the lube faster, but the effect is less.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
I started doing that, I think I just may have started too late. Slide is off to Ray's now, I'll see what I can do from there afterwards! But yes, this technique did really help me get it cleaner, at least for a bit. I am always concerned about the aggressiveness of my slide cleaning but the outers are usually warm to the touch, but sometimes not the last bottom bit near the crook as the way I put my cloth around the rod, it isn't as thick at the very end. Oh well?BurckhardtS wrote: ↑Tue Jun 12, 2018 1:37 pm One thing that has really helped keep my slide in shape (and a tech can correct/delete this post if I'm wrong) is that when you swab it out with a cleaning rod, you need to do it straight, and fairly aggressively.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
That's something I wondered too! It always felt like water decreased the lube longevity for me. And then there's a ton of condensation in my slide which may cause friction? Not sure about that part but water has almost always equalled more friction for me in the past year.timothy42b wrote: ↑Tue Jun 12, 2018 2:15 pm For me, adding water increases the slide speed by maybe 3%, and reduces the lube longevity by maybe 3000%.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
Have you tried using Yamaha snot aka Slide Lubricant instead? Single component, easy to use, overdosing is not catastrophic and you can forget about spraying water.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
I get at least 3 weeks of good slide after lubing, and another couple weeks of okay slide, if I don't add water.cyteakparagon wrote: ↑Wed Jun 13, 2018 4:27 pmThat's something I wondered too! It always felt like water decreased the lube longevity for me. And then there's a ton of condensation in my slide which may cause friction? Not sure about that part but water has almost always equalled more friction for me in the past year.timothy42b wrote: ↑Tue Jun 12, 2018 2:15 pm For me, adding water increases the slide speed by maybe 3%, and reduces the lube longevity by maybe 3000%.
Add water and that can be down to 2-3 days.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
All,
Just for anyone finding this thread in the future (and sorry for the late reply!), my secret formula has simply been to clean the slide with cloth as per these two videos , using Ray's magical little bottles per the instructions he's set out about once every couple-few months, depending on what I feel is necessary, and I plan to send the slide in for a check up annually? Bi-anually? Whatever makes the most sense financially and in terms of my poor slide's condition. Anyways, things are generally much better now; I wish everyone out there a brighter future and thank you so much everyone for your wonderful insight!
Best.
Just for anyone finding this thread in the future (and sorry for the late reply!), my secret formula has simply been to clean the slide with cloth as per these two videos , using Ray's magical little bottles per the instructions he's set out about once every couple-few months, depending on what I feel is necessary, and I plan to send the slide in for a check up annually? Bi-anually? Whatever makes the most sense financially and in terms of my poor slide's condition. Anyways, things are generally much better now; I wish everyone out there a brighter future and thank you so much everyone for your wonderful insight!
Best.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
I was going to suggest using a cleaning rod and cheesecloth. Looks like my ghost beat me to it!
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
"Yamaha slide lubricant" is the one I use. On old slides and some heavy slides I might use trombotine along with water.
Never lean on your slide Always use a stand for any trombone that has a valve. To rest a trigger trombone on the slide while counting rests will make a banana-shape of the slide after a few years. A two valved bass trombione will be destroyed even faster if you lean it on the floor. If you use the slide as a crutch and lean on it then prepare to visit a slide doctor often.
Small bore trombones with less weight seem not to be as affected by resting the trombone against the floor as long as you do not add more weight from your arms to that, but I do recommend a stand anyway.
/Tom
Never lean on your slide Always use a stand for any trombone that has a valve. To rest a trigger trombone on the slide while counting rests will make a banana-shape of the slide after a few years. A two valved bass trombione will be destroyed even faster if you lean it on the floor. If you use the slide as a crutch and lean on it then prepare to visit a slide doctor often.
Small bore trombones with less weight seem not to be as affected by resting the trombone against the floor as long as you do not add more weight from your arms to that, but I do recommend a stand anyway.
/Tom
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
This.imsevimse wrote: ↑Sat Mar 02, 2019 6:11 pm "Yamaha slide lubricant" is the one I use. On old slides and some heavy slides I might use trombotine along with water.
Never lean on your slide Always use a stand for any trombone that has a valve. To rest a trigger trombone on the slide while counting rests will make a banana-shape of the slide after a few years. A two valved bass trombione will be destroyed even faster if you lean it on the floor. If you use the slide as a crutch and lean on it then prepare to visit a slide doctor often.
Small bore trombones with less weight seem not to be as affected by resting the trombone against the floor as long as you do not add more weight from your arms to that, but I do recommend a stand anyway.
/Tom
I cringe every time I see someone rest a horn on a slide. Put it across your lap or use a stand, but the slide isn't meant to take the weight of a horn, much less a big horn!
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
Using a scrap of polyester microfiber terry cloth in my rod, I get the slide warm in ONE swipe to withdraw.BurckhardtS wrote: ↑Tue Jun 12, 2018 1:37 pm One thing that has really helped keep my slide in shape (and a tech can correct/delete this post if I'm wrong) is that when you swab it out with a cleaning rod, you need to do it straight, and fairly aggressively.
Obviously you don't want to warp your slide, but if I remember correctly on the Edwards website it says to swab until the outers are warm to the touch (a LOT of friction). It really clears off any slide cream/oil buildup on the outers which can make the slide feel dented or sticky.
I know too many of my friends that used to swab one or two strokes lightly and consider that 'clean' when that doesn't actually do anything. I've done this with my Edwards slide for the last few years and I don't have any serious issues.
One thing that helps is that I use muslin instead of cheesecloth because it builds slightly more friction than the cheesecloth you buy at your local Target.
Insert the rod till at the crook, spin the slide around the rod, winding up the cloth inside, then pull out once. Consistently clean every time.
I remember a video of Bill Watrous stroking and stroking his slide to heat it up. I'm sure it worked, but it sure looked like a great way to ventilate the crook.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
As pointed out in both videos, you always keep your thumb in the way at the right spot to keep the cleaning rod from going too far.
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
DO NOT use Ammonia on any part of your brass instrument!
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
Or original Windex (or other cleaning products), which contains ammonia. It'll eat into the lacquer!hornbuilder wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2019 6:11 pm DO NOT use Ammonia on any part of your brass instrument!
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Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
Different slides, different tolerances, different issues to be overcome.
My Blessing B88 and Conn 52H liked Yamaha Cream, the latter would hardly work with Trombotine. King 608 was OK with the Yamaha but then I tried Superslick. That's my one and only, now.
My Schiller Bach 42BO copy with one outer made on a Friday was on the chopping block until I tried one more Dawn-warm water bath, this time left in all day. Ran the Squirrel's tail swab through numerous times while it was submerged, then used up 2 yards of white cotton muslim-on-a-stick with massive amounts of brass polish. Back in the tub with the Squirrel and then copious amounts of water forced through from the tap. Thoroughly dried with more cloth and left it hanging overnite.
For two weeks I used more than the Doctor recommends of Superslick, did not wipe it off as he recommends before playing, but did swab it after each playing. It began better than before and kept improving. Now I do the Slide Doctor video Superslick application but wipe off only the tubes a few inches above the stickings. That's just how Ponds was used back before electricity.
It's now the best slide I've ever had. BTW, I find the Superslick spray bottle, while a pain to use (spray head always wants to rotate no matter how I hold it) best at dispensing the Supersmall water droplets optimum for a really fast slide.
My Blessing B88 and Conn 52H liked Yamaha Cream, the latter would hardly work with Trombotine. King 608 was OK with the Yamaha but then I tried Superslick. That's my one and only, now.
My Schiller Bach 42BO copy with one outer made on a Friday was on the chopping block until I tried one more Dawn-warm water bath, this time left in all day. Ran the Squirrel's tail swab through numerous times while it was submerged, then used up 2 yards of white cotton muslim-on-a-stick with massive amounts of brass polish. Back in the tub with the Squirrel and then copious amounts of water forced through from the tap. Thoroughly dried with more cloth and left it hanging overnite.
For two weeks I used more than the Doctor recommends of Superslick, did not wipe it off as he recommends before playing, but did swab it after each playing. It began better than before and kept improving. Now I do the Slide Doctor video Superslick application but wipe off only the tubes a few inches above the stickings. That's just how Ponds was used back before electricity.
It's now the best slide I've ever had. BTW, I find the Superslick spray bottle, while a pain to use (spray head always wants to rotate no matter how I hold it) best at dispensing the Supersmall water droplets optimum for a really fast slide.
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- Joined: Tue Apr 24, 2018 5:39 am
Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
Magic ingredient-mix for my old Bach 16 brass slide:
- a touch of Trombotine on spread on each slide stocking
- put outer slide back on; move it around a few times
- then put 2-3 drops of Yamaha purple bottle slide lubricant on the tops of the slide (by hand grip)
- move slide around a few times
See how this works for you...I haven't used a water spray bottle now for over 10 years....wish I'd had this solution 30 years ago!
- a touch of Trombotine on spread on each slide stocking
- put outer slide back on; move it around a few times
- then put 2-3 drops of Yamaha purple bottle slide lubricant on the tops of the slide (by hand grip)
- move slide around a few times
See how this works for you...I haven't used a water spray bottle now for over 10 years....wish I'd had this solution 30 years ago!
- harrisonreed
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- Location: Fort Riley, Kansas
- Contact:
Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
"Using lube every half hour"
You are using too much. End of story. Crystals are the result of using slide-o-mix at all. White residue is from yamasnot.
First clean the outer slide. Ultrasonic cleaning is no bueno. If you have to use brasso and the Slide Doc stuff, so be it. Put on the tiniest amount of cream (trombotine or superslick) possible (you can see through it on your finger) and that's enough for BOTH tubes. Rub onto the stockings and up the tubes. Work that into the outer slide one tube at a time. Then, wipe off the inner tubes with a clean cloth. Put a drop of superslick pro sealant on each stocking. A TINY drop. Work that into the outer skide one tube at a time. Then wipe each inner tube with a clean cloth. Spray with distilled water. Done.
You are using too much. End of story. Crystals are the result of using slide-o-mix at all. White residue is from yamasnot.
First clean the outer slide. Ultrasonic cleaning is no bueno. If you have to use brasso and the Slide Doc stuff, so be it. Put on the tiniest amount of cream (trombotine or superslick) possible (you can see through it on your finger) and that's enough for BOTH tubes. Rub onto the stockings and up the tubes. Work that into the outer slide one tube at a time. Then, wipe off the inner tubes with a clean cloth. Put a drop of superslick pro sealant on each stocking. A TINY drop. Work that into the outer skide one tube at a time. Then wipe each inner tube with a clean cloth. Spray with distilled water. Done.
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- Location: Devon UK
Re: Trouble with Slide, Bach 42BO
I've added some ball bearings to agitate and properly mix the Yammysnot, and have never had better results from a lubricant, and when I wipe the inner slide down there's no dry crusty residue either. IMO these soap and silicone products need a lot more shaking than the instructions suggest.harrisonreed wrote: ↑Thu Apr 11, 2019 8:02 pm
Crystals are the result of using slide-o-mix at all. White residue is from yamasnot.
Also, I use a Slide O Mix towelling sheath but with a couple of turns of Duct Tape at the bottom of the rod to get a really snug fit, and have shortened the sheath at the handle end to fix the bunching up of spare towelling. When it gets dirty I put it in the wash, and it comes out as new. There's also a piece of plastic fitted to protect the slide bow.