When is a slide worn out?
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When is a slide worn out?
I’m a trombone newbie with some trumpet & cornet experience who recently picked up a 1950 Buescher 400 T-bone. With valve instruments there are a variety of ways to assess compression & valve condition, but as a trombone beginner I wasn’t sure how to tell for if what I was holding was junk or not, especially at first when my chops were weak. It was in seemingly good shape when I picked it up: slide worked smoothly, no spots where it’s worn through; only minor dings; tuning slide wasn’t stuck. Things have gotten a lot better as my embouchure strengthened, so I’m pretty confident now that this horn at least isn’t a beater, but other than obvious plating wear / damage to slides, how do you tell when it’s worn out & needs replacement or repair?
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Re: When is a slide worn out?
The way to tell that something needs replacement or repair is that something either works badly or doesn't work at all.
Dents, plating loss on the inner tubes, visible misalignment when putting outer slide on inner slide, it just being slow, or the dreaded red rot. All mean that the slide should be taken to a tech. There is almost no magic to trombone slides. If it works well, you can't fix it. If it works badly, you can fix it.
It is rare that a seal on a slide is actually bad due to the tolerances being bad, but the cork can be an obvious issue. If you take the slide off, put a mouthpiece in and cover the other hole and air leaks, that's a sign that the waterkey cork needs replacement.
Dents, plating loss on the inner tubes, visible misalignment when putting outer slide on inner slide, it just being slow, or the dreaded red rot. All mean that the slide should be taken to a tech. There is almost no magic to trombone slides. If it works well, you can't fix it. If it works badly, you can fix it.
It is rare that a seal on a slide is actually bad due to the tolerances being bad, but the cork can be an obvious issue. If you take the slide off, put a mouthpiece in and cover the other hole and air leaks, that's a sign that the waterkey cork needs replacement.
Student in Sweden, usually looking for more trombones
- soseggnchips
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- Location: UK
Re: When is a slide worn out?
It's actually pretty hard to wear out a trombone slide. As long as it's moving freely and not making noise, it's probably OK. Lots of slides still work fine even once the plating starts to wear through.
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Re: When is a slide worn out?
Thanks for the replies. I think as a newbie I generally overestimated the fragility of the mechanism. Also I only paid about $50.00 for the horn so I was prepared for it to be junk, and it was the first trombone I had tried to play so I had no frame of reference.
How common is real red-rot in trombones? I’ve seen it on a lot of old trumpets & cornets, usually in the lead pipe.Peacemate wrote: ↑Fri Mar 05, 2021 5:42 pm The way to tell that something needs replacement or repair is that something either works badly or doesn't work at all.
Dents, plating loss on the inner tubes, visible misalignment when putting outer slide on inner slide, it just being slow, or the dreaded red rot. All mean that the slide should be taken to a tech. There is almost no magic to trombone slides. If it works well, you can't fix it. If it works badly, you can fix it.
It is rare that a seal on a slide is actually bad due to the tolerances being bad, but the cork can be an obvious issue. If you take the slide off, put a mouthpiece in and cover the other hole and air leaks, that's a sign that the waterkey cork needs replacement.
- BGuttman
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Re: When is a slide worn out?
Red rot usually shows in the slide crooks. Rarely affects the tubes. It is usually due to moisture left in the instrument coupled with a corrosive atmosphere.
Bruce Guttman
Merrimack Valley Philharmonic Orchestra
"Almost Professional"
Merrimack Valley Philharmonic Orchestra
"Almost Professional"