How To Replace a Trumpet Leadpipe

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  • Опубликовано: 3 мар 2022
  • This is a how-to video about replacing a trumpet leadpipe and what to look out for while you are doing this repair.
    Here is the link to the playlist "How To Solder: Repairing Broken Joints":
    • How To Solder: Repairi...
    Here is the link to the playlist "Buffing Musical Instruments":
    • Buffing Musical Instru...
    Here is the link to my website where you can view repair tools and instruments that I have for sale. 👇👇👇
    thebrassandwoodwindshop.net/s...
    Do you want to leave a tip so Art can continue to make more quality videos?
    TIP JAR - paypal.me/brassandwoodwindsho...
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Комментарии • 31

  • @lotsabirds
    @lotsabirds 2 года назад +4

    Hi Art...thanks for the reminder to check for leaks after soldering. I took apart and resoldered a tuning slide on an 1890s cornet and forgot to blow through it to check it. It's fine, no leaks. Your work is fabulous!

  • @Eduardomd54
    @Eduardomd54 5 месяцев назад

    Very interesting, you are a pro, doing this kind of work

  • @WillowsGarden
    @WillowsGarden 2 года назад +2

    Very nice fix, thanks for sharing and have a blessed day!

  • @manracmolactrac
    @manracmolactrac 2 года назад +1

    Was not prepared for the accidentally artsy shot of you lacquering with the graveyard in the background.

  • @davemiller7633
    @davemiller7633 2 года назад

    Absolutely magnificent. And look at that snow!!

  • @Onlytest2754
    @Onlytest2754 Год назад

    Excelente

  • @Eduardomd54
    @Eduardomd54 5 месяцев назад

    You make it look easy, but it requires a lot of expertise. I rather send you my trumpet ! How much do you charge for a lead pipe change? If it is possible to know? also to ask: Is this change, only for cosmetic issues or other? Greetings from Mexico.

  • @dwgibson2000
    @dwgibson2000 Год назад

    Might be an idea that someone like you set up a store where your viewers can order those parts. Seems like a great supply store as they even stock & will make obsolete parts based on ones sent them, and will silver plate them for 30% more, but the average person, such as me, just trying to restore old trumpets at home as a hobby, has no access unless they get a state tax exempt status. I have 2 that I desperately need a lead pipe for, a 1927 Martin Descant & a 1928 Conn 22B New York Symphony, both silver

    • @TheBrassandWoodwindShop
      @TheBrassandWoodwindShop  Год назад

      I have thought about doing that, but I already have too much that I am trying to do. Maybe I will try when things slow down. As for the old leadpipes, unfortunately, it is very difficult to impossible to find the original part. You may possibly find someone who can copy one, but usually it can only practically be replaced with a different leadpipe. If there is any way the original leadpipe can be salvaged, that is the best way to keep it original.

  • @chrislarsen79
    @chrislarsen79 Год назад

    Thank you kindly for the videos! I am learnig a lot. Expanding the scope here a bit....It is noticeable that you cut the leadpipe off at the tuning slide end; NOT at the mouthpiece end of the replacement lead pipe, where the taper is actually tightest near the venturi end. This fact would imply there is the least risk of destroying the proper desired taper, and that there is a region around this further point, which is cylindrical and available to be cutoff without impacting the taper or bow shape. Also... we know that C leadpipes are shorter. There is a 1.5 " variability in the Bach leadpipes for instance, as favored by Herseth, Adelstein, Schlueter, and Sachs. This impacts the slots and playability in interesting ways. So, the question is, how exactly is the length of a leadpipe measured and stated? The stock bare part length? From the receiver end gap to the end of the pipe? Reciever end to tuning slide? This is further complicated by the reverse orientation. So, none of the verbal explanations, nor diagrams, are adequate that I have found. One cannot measure this length easily from the outer inspection on an assembled trumpet either. Every joint has an overlap, and you need a caliper to drop in and see the gap and joint depth at the reciever and tuning slide. Last there is an adpater tube which connects the leadpipe to the tuning slide as well. So, again, one line on a finished trumpet is not precise. I get the basic, I am asking the specific question please...What precisely is the length definition? Thank you !!!

    • @TheBrassandWoodwindShop
      @TheBrassandWoodwindShop  Год назад

      You stumped me. I do not do much with acoustics on upper end trumpets. The student model trumpets are very easy to do. The small end of the leadpipe goes in up to the stepped part of the receiver. When I replace upper end trumpet leadpipes, they always come with the receiver and the upper tuning slide tube. that makes it easy to do, but it means that I have never had to study the lengths of leadpipes. Sorry I cannot help much.

    • @chrislarsen79
      @chrislarsen79 Год назад

      @@TheBrassandWoodwindShop Thank you for the thought and note, I appreciate your work a ton!

  • @dwgibson2000
    @dwgibson2000 Год назад

    Any ideas on how to restore a tuning slide that has been flattened inside by someone trying to unstick(likely) it?

    • @TheBrassandWoodwindShop
      @TheBrassandWoodwindShop  Год назад

      Those dents are tricky, but they can usually be done. You can try pushing/pulling dent balls through to get it better than it is and then finish the job by unsoldering one or both the tuning slide tubes and using the correct curved threaded dent mandrel with the correct threaded dent ball.

  • @Aduysvmncmkouyf
    @Aduysvmncmkouyf 2 года назад +1

    Hey, I have an issue with a tuba, the 4th valve(rotary) is stuck under the third valve, but only a part of the 4th valve is. How do I fix this?

    • @TheBrassandWoodwindShop
      @TheBrassandWoodwindShop  2 года назад +1

      Sorry it took me so long to get back to you. We just had a baby and I am finally getting around to answering questions.
      I am having a hard time picturing what you are talking about. Is part of the lever or linkage bent and hitting the other one?

  • @mashasiro2842
    @mashasiro2842 2 года назад +1

    Hey! So I was oiling my 3rd valve and put it in the wrong way and now it's stuck, all I was able to pull off was the button itself and the cap, how would i fix it 💀

  • @MikeSpeakman
    @MikeSpeakman Год назад +1

    Hi Art, it's been a while since i watched one of your video's so i was pleased to see one pop up on YT today.
    I would love to be repairing brass instruments over in the states instead of here in the UK. We do have a decent brass banding scene but schools hardly ever have a band anymore so the demand for brass band repair tools and parts is limited and so it's hard to get parts and tools. I would love to be able to go buy a piece of brass tube filled with pitch but sadly it's something you don't see here in the UK.
    I wondered about the lacquer you used, will it not just end up coming off because it hasn't been hardened/baked in an oven? I did try lacquering the inside of the bell of my Boosey & Hawkes Sovereign Eb tuba with automotive lacquer in a rattle can but it chipped and flaked like mad after a few weeks.

    • @TheBrassandWoodwindShop
      @TheBrassandWoodwindShop  Год назад +1

      I use a lacquer from a spray can but it doesn’t hold up the best. There is a band instrument repair college in the UK. I would suggest asking them what they would do because of the supplies available in the UK.

  • @Mr6438paul
    @Mr6438paul 2 года назад +1

    Hi love the videos, would you be able to point me to some tubing, or an online store for parts for the slide trumpet. I have an old bell,

    • @TheBrassandWoodwindShop
      @TheBrassandWoodwindShop  2 года назад +1

      The best way to get parts for a slide trumpet is to find a junk trumpet and an old small bore trombone that is in poor condition that you can get very inexpensively. If there are any other parts you need, you can get them from your local band instrument repair shop.

    • @Mr6438paul
      @Mr6438paul 2 года назад

      @@TheBrassandWoodwindShop thank you I'll be looking out for both. Great channel and videos.

  • @dwgibson2000
    @dwgibson2000 Год назад

    If I just order brass tubing of the right size and wall thickness, can I replace a lead pipe with that using the ends from the original?

    • @TheBrassandWoodwindShop
      @TheBrassandWoodwindShop  Год назад

      I am not sure I follow what you are saying, but you can reuse the receiver and tuning slide tube. I would not try to reuse and of the old leadpipe.

  • @EspressoBear59
    @EspressoBear59 4 месяца назад

    Do you use the same buffing compounds for a silver plated horn?

    • @TheBrassandWoodwindShop
      @TheBrassandWoodwindShop  4 месяца назад

      No, you should not buff silver plating unless you are re-plating the instrument. You can sometimes get away with lightly buffing silver plating with red rouge buffing compound to get off the excess solder, but it is best to solder very carefully so buffing is not necessary.

    • @EspressoBear59
      @EspressoBear59 4 месяца назад

      @@TheBrassandWoodwindShop thank you for the advice. Have two silver trumpets. I use a jewelers cloth to clean

  • @tomswift6198
    @tomswift6198 2 года назад +1

    Why would a customer want to replace a leadpipe? Doesn't look like the old one is badly damaged, or that the new one is more decorative or a different size.

    • @Quadstriker
      @Quadstriker 2 года назад +1

      Looked like a lot of red rot on the old one to me

    • @GhostRyder2008
      @GhostRyder2008 2 года назад +1

      There was red rot on the old one. Also, if you wanted to have a different material, taper, length, and/or venturi, then those would also be reasons to replace a leadpipe.

  • @raleigh6589
    @raleigh6589 2 года назад

    😚 Pᵣₒmₒˢᵐ