
Some spots of lacquer took some serious elbow grease to remove, some came off right away.
Yes, only the bell for now.
Yes, there's a couple spots on the stem of the bell that are not as shiny, and won't be coaxed to shininess.
I'll tell you when I play it next! Today was a bit of a slow day and I'm focusing on large tenor.
Harrison, are you hoping for a brighter sound out of your 3bss? Faster response? Just to get rid of patchy lacquer that hasn't aged well? I had an early 70s 1403sf that just instantly gave me a nicer tone; I went to a brass horn for more color and lighter weight.harrisonreed wrote: ↑Sun Jun 05, 2022 7:30 pm Looking good! I've been meaning to take the lacquer off the outside of my SS bell but the shop I asked here wouldn't do it.
Did it change how it plays?
That's the plan! Not going to relacquer or do anything fancy, just play 'em and they'll turn out however they do. For now they look great!
Dunno... played exactly 1 Cimera on the 607, felt good! Still don't have time for the small horns. Lots of time coming up though.
Burgerbob wrote: ↑Sun Jun 05, 2022 6:28 pm I have 2 '70s King 3B/Fs and a King 607... I have a bit of an addiction. In any case, that gives me some wiggle room to mess with them. I recently bought some EZ Off Heavy Duty and some Hope's brass polish. Here's the results on my beater 3B/F (ok, all 3 are beaters. This is the most beater-y):
Some spots of lacquer took some serious elbow grease to remove, some came off right away.
An oven cleaner. I use the heavy duty strengthDsbones wrote: ↑Tue Aug 16, 2022 12:02 amBurgerbob wrote: ↑Sun Jun 05, 2022 6:28 pm I have 2 '70s King 3B/Fs and a King 607... I have a bit of an addiction. In any case, that gives me some wiggle room to mess with them. I recently bought some EZ Off Heavy Duty and some Hope's brass polish. Here's the results on my beater 3B/F (ok, all 3 are beaters. This is the most beater-y):
Some spots of lacquer took some serious elbow grease to remove, some came off right away.
May I ask What Ez Off is please?
Best of luck!!
Getting it off the Kings took many, many sprays and more than an hour. Some spots took probably 5 or 6 applications.spencercarran wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 2:01 pm I tried a similar procedure on my old Holton bass, with strangely patchy results. May take a few rounds of EZ Off, I guess. Was sorta expecting the Holton lacquer to slough off more easily than the orange King stuff.
Good to know. I've got it mostly cleared from the front of the bell and like the results there, so will probably go back and strip off the rest too. (Almost definitely will; the half-lacquered look is weird)Burgerbob wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 2:29 pmGetting it off the Kings took many, many sprays and more than an hour. Some spots took probably 5 or 6 applications.spencercarran wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 2:01 pm I tried a similar procedure on my old Holton bass, with strangely patchy results. May take a few rounds of EZ Off, I guess. Was sorta expecting the Holton lacquer to slough off more easily than the orange King stuff.
Thanks for the tip. Just did a very orange non-loopy Concert bell (mid-to-late 70s). Applied heavily, ran away for a half hr or so, nearly all came off in the first round. A couple of spots took a second application, not because of lacquer condition (one was pristine inner bell, the other flaky stem) but likely just early run-off based on the position I left it sitting. That's it - doing it somewhere heated to the mid-80s probably helped.
If you rub a silicone cloth over the raw brass after you polish it I've heard it slows the progress of the patina.
I used some wadding polish called Nevr-Dull. It's been around under different names for a very long time (I inherited some called "Maserati" from my father-in-law dating back to the 1940s). My friend polished up an old tuba (pre lacquer) with the stuff and it looked beautiful for a couple of years.
Actually, I've tried to strip epoxies with methylene chloride for years with very mixed results. And a warning to do-it-yourselfers: methylene chloride evaporates so quickly it won't make a difference unless you put it a\in a closed container and leave it sealed. To boot, methylene chloride is a registered carcinogen.