You know that part about you saying something about shutting a flute in a door??...idea???😂😂 but seriously, I really enjoyed the video of you learning flight of the bumblebee in a specific amount of time, and you should do it with a harder piece😃
From the perspective of a professional band instrument repair tech.... There are 2 types of technicians in the world. Those who have impaled themselves with a woodwind spring and those that are about to.
I took my flute apart in middle school. It was purchased used and needed a good cleaning. I disassembled it, cleaned it, and was halfway back to putting it back together when my mom found what I was doing. She thought it was my sister's flute because it looked so nice. I told her it was mine, and she pretty much thought I was lying until later. I got it back together and I think it worked better than when I disassembled it.
The little electrical screwdrivers work like a charm. Gotta put sticky stuff down to organize and secure the tiny screws. They're almost as tiny and skinny as those in glasses. Lay it all out like surgical instruments.
Many thanks from all of us who have been dying to take our own flutes apart but know it would end in disaster. Now I can watch you do it instead. I would also love to watch a 2+ hour follow up in which you hand this flute to a tech and film an in-depth discussion while s/he puts it all back together. As you say, flute techs are amazing. I would love to watch one working their magic.
I used to do that too, when I played. Just like owning a gun. I even learnt how to activate the springs -- I wore braces then, balance key pads and cut corks from wine bottle corks in between overhauls at Colvig's. Got it down to just under 3 minutes. It helps to organize the screws, rods and axles on a clean surface and fix the screws to sticky back paper.
When I saw this notification, I immediately thought: doesn’t one just attach the foot joint and head joint to the body? And is Katie drunk? 😜😜😂😂😂. But seriously, it’s interesting to watch the process!
A lot of techs wont even fix these brands because the keys bend soooooo easily. I've am a repair tech and we die inside when we get instruments like these on our benches 😂
Well, that went about as well as the time I decided to replace the corks on a clarinet that was found abandoned in a classroom and the corks only went about 3/4 around the tenons (back in my early band director days). I've learned to make many repairs on many instruments through the years, and honestly, this is the best way to learn. You just needed a big piece of paper (butcher paper or even the backside of wrapping paper works) to cover your table surface and a pencil to diagram and label parts as you take them off and lay them out in a logical and orderly fashion. Don't be afraid to try it again sometime! (And you might even figure out where that last screw goes!)
I repair locks for a living and we have some that are literal puzzles, and how they go together depends entirely on brand and what era it was made in. The practice that was always instilled in me was to take pictures of the whole thing before taking it apart from every angle possible, and if I was going to have to take something apart with a lot of pieces that look similar, as soon as a piece came out, it was bagged and labeled with where it came from. It makes rebuilding something far easier to manage.
I honestly got more interested about fixing flutes than I did playing it. I only brought my intermediate flute into its first COA about 13 years after buying it because I pretty much did all my own maintenance. Got lazy as of recent so I decided to send it into the shop. Ironically now, I just started working on today, restoring a 19th/20th century French flute I bought off eBay. So far, it sucks so much because the brilliant fool cemented the pads into the cups and the pads are all deteriorating into dust. But got a bunch of tools and supplies to get the job done.
I got scared for my current flute (my Altus) earlier today because I had my dress rehearsal for my wind ensemble concert and I wasn’t able to play low f, middle f and middle f# and my friend who’s the flute ta told me that it was because the screw of the split e had gotten out of adjustment due to the weather changes and I had a spring that went out of place.That’s awesome that you know how to take apart a flute, I know basic repair things ( like putting a spring back in place and tightening/loosening screws)😊❤️
I have the same flute that Katie has (as well as a better one, too), and I used it to practice cause I left my other one at school, and none of the F's were working, so I freaked out, and then I checked the springs and fixed it 😂
Few tips if you're adventurous enough to do it again: Organise the parts into small numbered boxes. Use your taking apart footage and another flute for reference to put it back together. If you think about it, you need to do the taking apart actions, just in reverse.
Video idea: a visit to the repair tech for a few tips and tricks on quick/temporary fixes? That flute was a doozy of a demo instrument and would be a great conversation piece with the technician as well!
I've tried the same thing back a long time ago. Fixed the keys myself...big mistake. The next day the flute was at the shop ! When you Don't know what you are doing better sent it to an expert. I'm sorry for you but it makes me feel good to see that i'm not the only one who went through things like you did in this video ..lol..Cheers from Montréal Québec !
You are so me! I took my flute apart at 15, miraculously it still played! Tried it again on a thrift store $20 one, not so much. It was fun watching someone else work that puzzle!
Well done Katie. That was impressive, I used to take apart ps3's, a games console, and give them a clean and on the odd occasion give a fan mod to cool the heat sinks and I used to always miss things and put the wrong things in the wrong order, having to take it back apart to put a curcuit board layer or something bk in, that wouldn't fit on top of the next piece. it took me hours sometimes, talk about overwhelming like a 3d jigsaw with 4d mechanisms, even putting the screws bk in for the outercase took the michael, their been like 8 outer and 20 inner small screws, right pain in the brain. Your face was a picture when you remembered you missed the big rod that goes through the bottom middle. Been there...lol. I'll not take mine apart, tho it must need fixing, because I can only get a few notes, even your remixfix got more notes out, I must be holding it wrong, I only used a recorder when I was like 6 or 7 and just copied pattern instead of reading notes because it seemed easier for my brain to figure out in the time space the teacher gave to understand her explanation of how notes reeed.(phonetically). Anyway might have to start working out with my arms because even 15 mins of holding my arms at the side of my face or head, I felt like I should devise some sort of arm rest so my arms weren't so knackered. When I next get £400 spare I'll get a New York flute if they deliver to UK, and see if it's the £40 flutes fault I'm blowing 2 notes, my post code ends in 9ny. So be nice to hold something made in ny. They might give you a free clean of your dear/expensive flute, for getting custom from uk. Unless that's already the gig. Sorry for nattering, quality video, loved it. At the end of the vid I'd of just chucked it, on camera. Saying i knew I shouldn't of done that...lol. I'd offer to buy you a meal for the time you've entertained and put a tone of delight in my days, if I lived within hugging distance. Hope you have a wonderful October.
Thanks for the hard work and the great video. Very interesting and I am reminded why I shy away from any repair work (the good thing is that the local flute doctor is the father of my sister's friend, so I don't need to take anything apart myself and can get my flute fixed in no time).
I learned to take photos of things before taking apart! After moving my mom’s China closet and trying to reassemble her China I learned to photograph., photograph, photograph! Never took my flute or piccolo apart. I just took them to a professional to replace pads or sticky notes
My father described a performance in Philadelphia in the 1950's where the guest flutist took his flute apart after his first part of the symphony or whatever and had it back together before his next bit began. No idea who the flutist was but an an engineer, father was impressed.
Flute's easy when you know how. (Try doing a sax!) G# goes back on first, then trills. Trill touches must be tucked UNDER the springs for the E and D keys; that's what went wrong here I think.
This is sooo freaking funny lmao! i don't play flute, i play clarinet been playing for over 9 years! (22 btw) And i was just about to take my clarinet apart until i watched your video and i was like " nope never mind! I'm good luv enjoy"! HAHA
This is a yearly maintenance thing for oboes made of wood. You literally have to take all the hardware off, oil the bore, and clean out the octave vents. I leave it to my oboe technician to do, but most just do it themselves. When taking the keys off, lay them out the same way they came off.
I've actually done this a few times. Re padded a flute once. Took me all day, but I got all the keys to seal. My old Gemeindhart is currently half apart. Has bent keys and a bent spring. Taken it apart twice and still haven't bent it back quite right.
Hi Katie - Here’s an idea you might want to take and run with it. As long as it “looks right cosmetically,” there’s no need to throw it away. The flute can always be used as a decorative wall hanger, or even made into a decorative lamp. 😉
I know you are doing this for fun, but the rule of thumb is to disengage before disassemble. So, for any woodwind instrument with keys (sax, clarinet, flute, etc), the springs need to be taken out of their place and disengaged before you start unscrewing the instrument. This helps with the longevity of the springs as well as possible accidents (ie. if the spring breaks and goes to your eye or if the keys jump out because they have tension on them)
I like this. You have an adventurous mind. Great! I am an engineer for real, and learning the flute. Oh, I am an electronic engineer, but I would still do it. You did it! Dan Berendt.
Did you ever get it back together or did you just give up? I enjoy taking things apart a lot. I tend to take a lot of high res pictures and make little drawings of things that may be ambiguous in a photo. The biggest thing not to do is force anything. As long as you don't overly bend or snap anything it should go back together. One thing I was hoping you would show in more detail is how the pads cover the holes and the condition of both. If you have leaks there has to be something a bit off about how the pads cover the holes. Not sure if the pads are of center of if they are wrinkled or if there are burrs on the hole or what, but something is preventing a good seal and it would have been interesting seeing what it was.
I'm training to be a Woodwind maker/repairer and your 'technique' for taking apart the flute (using pliers for the rods) is actually right!! Except you do have to use soft jawed pliers (brass instead of steel) so you dont bend/mark them. I think it doesnt play because the trill key is slightly bent and so the pad will not be seating fully on the hole making a huge leak which will make it impossible to play below that key (so literally every single note XD) however I only started in september (2019) and I've only started basic repairs on clarenets so far so I could be wrong!
Liked it! Are you going to get a new pink flute after this 'taking my pink flute apart'-event? Maybe a new one wil sound different? 😀#curious Would also like to see how a professional flute maker does it, maybe make a show together😊.
hey katie after watching u now for 2 years. you inspired me to practice a new instrament and would love to get recomendations from you on good beginner lv flutes i could possibly find at my local music shop.
Mendinis are known to be terrible lol, I've tinkered with mine some and I found that the more I work with it the better it sounded. They are notorious for leakes and screws come lose very easily. They are also known for being scattered; each joint is supposed to be the same make, though mendinis are not. Think of it as the pieces are in barrels, each barrel is full of different random makes, and a "technician" grabs random makes from each barrel and slaps them together and vwala, mendini. I learned this after I marched my mendini and I was so furious because I couldnt play half the time. I made out pretty well though.
A few days after I bought my piccolo, something went wrong and decided to try to fix it. I thought whatever was wrong was on the Eb key. So what do I do? I pop out a spring trying to adjust it. I never was able to put the spring back in because I dropped it on the floor and was never able to find it. I had youth symphony rehearsal that same night and my conductor took one of her daughter's headbands and wrapped it around the Eb key. It worked and was able to get the spring replaced for free a few days shortly after.
If I were to do this, I would take snapshots of what it looked like for every key I took off and then put the screws and keys and springs, etc. together in a pile. 😋 I would ToTaLlY take apart my flute once I get my b flute. BUT I’m gonna wait until I’m out of music school to do it bc you never know if your instrument breaks. Then you’ll have a spare😋
I decided to by a $30 one off ebay to practice taking apart before doing my own.. I haven't played in 20 years and wanted to get the tarnish off it.. after watching this I'm glad I'll be doing it on a cheap ebay one lol... love the pink flute tho
pls don't take ur instruments apart I don't want angry emails from ur band directors flooding my inbox!!! thnx 4 watching 💖
katieflute haha, I don’t want to die so ye I won’t
As a instrument repair technician you are a great flautist!
You know that part about you saying something about shutting a flute in a door??...idea???😂😂 but seriously, I really enjoyed the video of you learning flight of the bumblebee in a specific amount of time, and you should do it with a harder piece😃
You may get emails of thanks from the neighbours...
Ok
From the perspective of a professional band instrument repair tech.... There are 2 types of technicians in the world. Those who have impaled themselves with a woodwind spring and those that are about to.
More like " you have people who are lazy, emotionally, mentally, and those who are true students and applied. "
@@PapiBauby Now thats just mean. My comment was in jest... Although very true.
@@PapiBauby Ooooooh the *SHADE!* Wha the heck!
@@PapiBauby How do you think students learn? Let's be serious nobody is born good at their craft
I took my flute apart in middle school. It was purchased used and needed a good cleaning. I disassembled it, cleaned it, and was halfway back to putting it back together when my mom found what I was doing. She thought it was my sister's flute because it looked so nice. I told her it was mine, and she pretty much thought I was lying until later. I got it back together and I think it worked better than when I disassembled it.
Me: a beginner flute player
Katie: plays a scale
Me: wow that sounds awesome
Katie: Ya...it's junk.
Me: I know right
The main problem is how awfully airy it is
Flute came with screw driver:
Katie: they are just asking me to take it apart!!
Lyla Laycre all brass instruments can also be take apart to clean them
The little electrical screwdrivers work like a charm. Gotta put sticky stuff down to organize and secure the tiny screws. They're almost as tiny and skinny as those in glasses. Lay it all out like surgical instruments.
Liked for the obligatory "leftover screw" actually happening. :)
Katie: I am lost, I did not organize this very well
Also Katie: LEts dO tHe FoOTjOiNt nOw!
Oh and also Katie at 13:07: 😐🤨
it's called the tailjoint
Gacha girl Lynn
It is also called the foot joint
@@cynthiaxd8181it’s called a foot joint where I’m from.
You hung up on me?? :,(
Jeremías Sergiani-Velázquez 😂
lol rip
Many thanks from all of us who have been dying to take our own flutes apart but know it would end in disaster. Now I can watch you do it instead. I would also love to watch a 2+ hour follow up in which you hand this flute to a tech and film an in-depth discussion while s/he puts it all back together. As you say, flute techs are amazing. I would love to watch one working their magic.
I used to do that too, when I played. Just like owning a gun. I even learnt how to activate the springs -- I wore braces then, balance key pads and cut corks from wine bottle corks in between overhauls at Colvig's. Got it down to just under 3 minutes. It helps to organize the screws, rods and axles on a clean surface and fix the screws to sticky back paper.
When I saw this notification, I immediately thought: doesn’t one just attach the foot joint and head joint to the body? And is Katie drunk? 😜😜😂😂😂. But seriously, it’s interesting to watch the process!
This gives me anxiety lol
rockytoptennessee same
I’m a violinist but somehow I ended up on your channel and now I’m binge watching
I also am a violinist and after watching I decided I wanted to play flute.
I love this! It's a prime example of why players should not dismantle their own flute. Thank you Katie.
Flute Praying Friend: so what brand of flute do you play?
Katie: oH, i PlaY eBaY aNd aMazON.
After that... I would honestly love to see a professional take apart/fix the flute now 😂
Totally
A lot of techs wont even fix these brands because the keys bend soooooo easily. I've am a repair tech and we die inside when we get instruments like these on our benches 😂
I saw the title and I was really scared but then I saw the pink flute and I was very relieved.
Imagine having an instrument that can cut you when you take it apart.
This comment brought to you by the Plastic Recorder Ensemble™
Should I take apart my grand piano??😂😂😂 definitely I won’t make it to put it back!
Well, that went about as well as the time I decided to replace the corks on a clarinet that was found abandoned in a classroom and the corks only went about 3/4 around the tenons (back in my early band director days). I've learned to make many repairs on many instruments through the years, and honestly, this is the best way to learn. You just needed a big piece of paper (butcher paper or even the backside of wrapping paper works) to cover your table surface and a pencil to diagram and label parts as you take them off and lay them out in a logical and orderly fashion. Don't be afraid to try it again sometime! (And you might even figure out where that last screw goes!)
As a flute and oboe repair person this pains me 😂 Atleast you didn’t treat a “real” flute like this because that would not have been good.
Same here.... I was saying to myself "shes going to get stabbed by a spring for sure". Not even two minutes later....
Is it bad that I enjoyed watching this flute fall apart
If this is bad, then I don't wanna be right.
Yes.
Lol no.🤣🤣
I repair locks for a living and we have some that are literal puzzles, and how they go together depends entirely on brand and what era it was made in. The practice that was always instilled in me was to take pictures of the whole thing before taking it apart from every angle possible, and if I was going to have to take something apart with a lot of pieces that look similar, as soon as a piece came out, it was bagged and labeled with where it came from. It makes rebuilding something far easier to manage.
I honestly got more interested about fixing flutes than I did playing it. I only brought my intermediate flute into its first COA about 13 years after buying it because I pretty much did all my own maintenance. Got lazy as of recent so I decided to send it into the shop.
Ironically now, I just started working on today, restoring a 19th/20th century French flute I bought off eBay. So far, it sucks so much because the brilliant fool cemented the pads into the cups and the pads are all deteriorating into dust. But got a bunch of tools and supplies to get the job done.
I did that when I was bored as a kid. I got pretty good at tearing down that old Armstrong and putting it back together again.
me too!
You tried playing concerto in g major and I like the “new version” 😂😂 sounds great 👍🏻
I felt the pain when she figured out that the trill goes on first before the right hand keys :(
Luv u Katie ❤️ my fav youtuber
😊💖🙏🏻
Turquoise fingernail polish was a bold choice, but not nearly as bold as disassembling a working instrument. Girl, you totally ROCK!
I got scared for my current flute (my Altus) earlier today because I had my dress rehearsal for my wind ensemble concert and I wasn’t able to play low f, middle f and middle f# and my friend who’s the flute ta told me that it was because the screw of the split e had gotten out of adjustment due to the weather changes and I had a spring that went out of place.That’s awesome that you know how to take apart a flute, I know basic repair things ( like putting a spring back in place and tightening/loosening screws)😊❤️
I have the same flute that Katie has (as well as a better one, too), and I used it to practice cause I left my other one at school, and none of the F's were working, so I freaked out, and then I checked the springs and fixed it 😂
sCaRy
Few tips if you're adventurous enough to do it again:
Organise the parts into small numbered boxes.
Use your taking apart footage and another flute for reference to put it back together. If you think about it, you need to do the taking apart actions, just in reverse.
13:33 Mozart G major flute concerto, first movement.
Video idea: a visit to the repair tech for a few tips and tricks on quick/temporary fixes? That flute was a doozy of a demo instrument and would be a great conversation piece with the technician as well!
As soon as you started reconstructing the pieces there was 𝚒𝚗𝚜𝚝𝚊𝚗𝚝 regret😂
I've tried the same thing back a long time ago. Fixed the keys myself...big mistake. The next day the flute was at the shop ! When you Don't know what you are doing better sent it to an expert. I'm sorry for you but it makes me feel good to see that i'm not the only one who went through things like you did in this video ..lol..Cheers from Montréal Québec !
Katie you’re the best!
I am excited to watch this!!!!🤗🤗🤗❤️
You are so me! I took my flute apart at 15, miraculously it still played! Tried it again on a thrift store $20 one, not so much. It was fun watching someone else work that puzzle!
My daughter and I watched this together yesterday. We are both flutists. We laughed so hard but I have to say it did give me a bit of anxiety lol.
Well done Katie. That was impressive, I used to take apart ps3's, a games console, and give them a clean and on the odd occasion give a fan mod to cool the heat sinks and I used to always miss things and put the wrong things in the wrong order, having to take it back apart to put a curcuit board layer or something bk in, that wouldn't fit on top of the next piece. it took me hours sometimes, talk about overwhelming like a 3d jigsaw with 4d mechanisms, even putting the screws bk in for the outercase took the michael, their been like 8 outer and 20 inner small screws, right pain in the brain. Your face was a picture when you remembered you missed the big rod that goes through the bottom middle. Been there...lol. I'll not take mine apart, tho it must need fixing, because I can only get a few notes, even your remixfix got more notes out, I must be holding it wrong, I only used a recorder when I was like 6 or 7 and just copied pattern instead of reading notes because it seemed easier for my brain to figure out in the time space the teacher gave to understand her explanation of how notes reeed.(phonetically). Anyway might have to start working out with my arms because even 15 mins of holding my arms at the side of my face or head, I felt like I should devise some sort of arm rest so my arms weren't so knackered. When I next get £400 spare I'll get a New York flute if they deliver to UK, and see if it's the £40 flutes fault I'm blowing 2 notes, my post code ends in 9ny. So be nice to hold something made in ny. They might give you a free clean of your dear/expensive flute, for getting custom from uk. Unless that's already the gig. Sorry for nattering, quality video, loved it. At the end of the vid I'd of just chucked it, on camera. Saying i knew I shouldn't of done that...lol. I'd offer to buy you a meal for the time you've entertained and put a tone of delight in my days, if I lived within hugging distance. Hope you have a wonderful October.
THAT TUNE IS MY FAVE MOZART FLUTE CONCERTO NO.1
So many parts and a lot of work! I feel your pain!
i just got into honours band!!! so excited & love all of the inspiration from a wonderful flutist like her 💕
Love to you and music, you are wonderful, cheers! 🎉
Thanks for the hard work and the great video. Very interesting and I am reminded why I shy away from any repair work (the good thing is that the local flute doctor is the father of my sister's friend, so I don't need to take anything apart myself and can get my flute fixed in no time).
I had to laugh so hard about that result😂 I think you forgot to drive in the screws for the mechanism to seal correctly😂
I learned to take photos of things before taking apart! After moving my mom’s China closet and trying to reassemble her China I learned to photograph., photograph, photograph! Never took my flute or piccolo apart. I just took them to a professional to replace pads or sticky notes
Omg you used my idea!!!!!! I can die happy now oml thank you Flute QUeen
My father described a performance in Philadelphia in the 1950's where the guest flutist took his flute apart after his first part of the symphony or whatever and had it back together before his next bit began. No idea who the flutist was but an an engineer, father was impressed.
Moral of the video don’t take apart your flute unless you’re professional and if somethings wrong with it give it to a professional to fix
yo can we do an eBay piccolo deconstruction video? lol
Thank you for my first laugh of the day!!! I really enjoyed your video and will never never attempt to repair my flute or piccolo. Thanks Katie.
Me- hey wanna watch a scary movie flute!?
Flute- AHH mom!!!
I play the clarinet and I have a friend that's plays the flute though I love watching your videos!!!!
Well I certainly enjoyed that. I'm very impressed, much less swearing than if I was doing that.
When you try to be “Jerryrigeverything”...
*Furiously scratching and scraping of the purple paint*
I'm buying a pink flute and doing this over Christmas break. lol
I love your channel Katie!!
Flute's easy when you know how. (Try doing a sax!) G# goes back on first, then trills. Trill touches must be tucked UNDER the springs for the E and D keys; that's what went wrong here I think.
This is sooo freaking funny lmao! i don't play flute, i play clarinet been playing for over 9 years! (22 btw) And i was just about to take my clarinet apart until i watched your video and i was like " nope never mind! I'm good luv enjoy"! HAHA
All I can hear is my beautiful masterpiece of Eine Kleine Nachtmusik
This is a yearly maintenance thing for oboes made of wood. You literally have to take all the hardware off, oil the bore, and clean out the octave vents. I leave it to my oboe technician to do, but most just do it themselves. When taking the keys off, lay them out the same way they came off.
I love how shes an amazing player but doesnt take herself so seriously! I always recommend this video to my students 😂😂😂😂😂 hilarious and so relatable
Aw my gosh it’s such a stunning creation of absolute detail ! I want one so bad ...
I love your videos I’m a flute player myself ... how many flutes do u have in total? I own 2 flutes
PS please have me on as a guest so I can show the right order of things for proper disassembly
love you.
@@kyleruggles8754 try to email her
@@sehershazad7715 I just texted her, thanks
@@kyleruggles8754 your welcome hopefully it goes well
Teach online please. I would love to learn n clean and do some maintaining instruments like flute and clarinet.
I've actually done this a few times. Re padded a flute once. Took me all day, but I got all the keys to seal. My old Gemeindhart is currently half apart. Has bent keys and a bent spring. Taken it apart twice and still haven't bent it back quite right.
Hi Katie - Here’s an idea you might want to take and run with it. As long as it “looks right cosmetically,” there’s no need to throw it away. The flute can always be used as a decorative wall hanger, or even made into a decorative lamp. 😉
Love this video!!
I know you are doing this for fun, but the rule of thumb is to disengage before disassemble. So, for any woodwind instrument with keys (sax, clarinet, flute, etc), the springs need to be taken out of their place and disengaged before you start unscrewing the instrument. This helps with the longevity of the springs as well as possible accidents (ie. if the spring breaks and goes to your eye or if the keys jump out because they have tension on them)
Wow taking it a part that is my girl cutest in the web and beautifull tooooo
I like this. You have an adventurous mind. Great! I am an engineer for real, and learning the flute. Oh, I am an electronic engineer, but I would still do it. You did it! Dan Berendt.
Did you ever get it back together or did you just give up? I enjoy taking things apart a lot. I tend to take a lot of high res pictures and make little drawings of things that may be ambiguous in a photo. The biggest thing not to do is force anything. As long as you don't overly bend or snap anything it should go back together. One thing I was hoping you would show in more detail is how the pads cover the holes and the condition of both. If you have leaks there has to be something a bit off about how the pads cover the holes. Not sure if the pads are of center of if they are wrinkled or if there are burrs on the hole or what, but something is preventing a good seal and it would have been interesting seeing what it was.
I love this video. Luckily i know how to put mine back together hahaha
This is so saCRiLegiOuS...
It is nice color I think that you can use it to decorate
I'm training to be a Woodwind maker/repairer and your 'technique' for taking apart the flute (using pliers for the rods) is actually right!! Except you do have to use soft jawed pliers (brass instead of steel) so you dont bend/mark them.
I think it doesnt play because the trill key is slightly bent and so the pad will not be seating fully on the hole making a huge leak which will make it impossible to play below that key (so literally every single note XD) however I only started in september (2019) and I've only started basic repairs on clarenets so far so I could be wrong!
I use this flute to teach, so i don't harm any good flutes. I might do this to this!!!
Or make it a lamp
How about if you and justanotherflutist review each other's flutes?
bahahah when you started playing it after i died 🤣🤣🤣
Liked it! Are you going to get a new pink flute after this 'taking my pink flute apart'-event? Maybe a new one wil sound different? 😀#curious Would also like to see how a professional flute maker does it, maybe make a show together😊.
Mozart will never sound the same again!! 😂😂😂
9:40 was an entire mood🤣
Me: *See dee Title*
Me: Oh, she is just *Twisting it out and then Twisting it out*
Katie: *Demolish the Flute*
Me: Okay
11:27 “How do they make it look so easy” XD
hey katie after watching u now for 2 years. you inspired me to practice a new instrament and would love to get recomendations from you on good beginner lv flutes i could possibly find at my local music shop.
Mendinis are known to be terrible lol, I've tinkered with mine some and I found that the more I work with it the better it sounded. They are notorious for leakes and screws come lose very easily. They are also known for being scattered; each joint is supposed to be the same make, though mendinis are not. Think of it as the pieces are in barrels, each barrel is full of different random makes, and a "technician" grabs random makes from each barrel and slaps them together and vwala, mendini. I learned this after I marched my mendini and I was so furious because I couldnt play half the time. I made out pretty well though.
People say flute players are snakes but you seem really nice.
I’m reviewing my flute and found visible screws and now I’m laughing so hard I can’t breathe
I subscribed after watching this because I've dreamed of doing this to one of my flutes for 40 years 🤣
That flute is now what is affectionately known as a "wall hanger".
A few days after I bought my piccolo, something went wrong and decided to try to fix it. I thought whatever was wrong was on the Eb key. So what do I do? I pop out a spring trying to adjust it. I never was able to put the spring back in because I dropped it on the floor and was never able to find it. I had youth symphony rehearsal that same night and my conductor took one of her daughter's headbands and wrapped it around the Eb key. It worked and was able to get the spring replaced for free a few days shortly after.
Katie put the screw back in the trill key post and then put the spring back in place bc the trill is leaking
The pink eBay flute may not be very good as well, but it’s so pretty what the heck 😭
If I were to do this, I would take snapshots of what it looked like for every key I took off and then put the screws and keys and springs, etc. together in a pile. 😋 I would ToTaLlY take apart my flute once I get my b flute. BUT I’m gonna wait until I’m out of music school to do it bc you never know if your instrument breaks. Then you’ll have a spare😋
I decided to by a $30 one off ebay to practice taking apart before doing my own.. I haven't played in 20 years and wanted to get the tarnish off it.. after watching this I'm glad I'll be doing it on a cheap ebay one lol... love the pink flute tho
I just subscribed 😅 this was a fun watch. Never considered taking my flute apart before, and now I won’t. 👍
It's much easier to take the mechanism apart, if you start by unhooking the springs. :-)
René Blom omg !!!! That makes a lot of sense 😂😂😂😂
Concerto in G by Mozart
LOVE THIS!