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PeterWillis Technician
Joined: August.01.05 Location: USA
Online Status: Offline Posts: 4
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Posted: December.05.05 at 11:24pm | IP Logged
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Anyone out there have
a lot of experience "making" sax pads? I recently had to re-use some
old Conn Reso-pad rings and dissect new regular pads to make Reso-pads
for a 20's bari with a few tight keycup/tonehole diameter matchups. It
wasn't too bad except getting the leather down on the back - any tricks?
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LarryMueller Technician & Clinician
Joined: January.20.05 Location: USA
Online Status: Offline Posts: 24
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Posted: December.06.05 at 6:31am | IP Logged
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Peter,
I too have tried making pads, and they didn't turn out
too well; all loose and sloppy. People who know use a pad die, which is
a block of wood (or whatever) with a shallow hole bored in it, one for
each size of pad, to help keep it to shape. They use Aleene's Tacky
Glue, available at the large craft stores, like Micheal's. Place the
leather or skin in first, upside down, then add the felt and cardboard
and fold the leather over. If you get it to work, come to Texas to
teach me how.
Larry
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admin Admin Group
Joined: March.10.05 Location: USA
Online Status: Offline Posts: 304
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Posted: December.06.05 at 10:55am | IP Logged
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Hi Guys,
Haven't tried making pads but I would think you could
use the pad cup for a die. That's what's used when reskinning a
Straubinger pad.
Reso-pads - I've seen them available from one of the suppliers but don't remember which....Ferree's? Ed Myers?
Hope this helps,
Michelle
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stevemarti Technician
Joined: January.19.05 Location: USA
Online Status: Offline Posts: 7
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Posted: December.07.05 at 3:46pm | IP Logged
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Pad cup idea might work most of the time. but isn't the o.d. of the metal reso-ring normally larger than the pad cup?
If
it isn't the largest pad on the horn, maybe another key cup will work
as a fixture. A fixture can be a hole in a sheet of plastic, wood,
metal, etc. |
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JeffPeterson Technician
Joined: January.26.05 Location: USA
Online Status: Offline Posts: 0
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Posted: December.17.05 at 9:34am | IP Logged
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I have had occassion to re-skin or fabricate sax pads. Dies would be
helpful. Working without them is doable, though. It just takes some
ironing with a pad slick on the surface and sides to get the leather
tight enough to look like a pad. -Jeff
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bandman886 Newbie
Joined: August.16.06 Location: United States
Online Status: Offline Posts: 1
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Posted: August.19.06 at 10:50am | IP Logged
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Hello techs,,, I am the new kid on the block. Maybe this will help. You can order custom made pads from MusicMedic.com and the price is very resonable.-Dale
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riguto Newbie
Joined: August.09.06 Location: Austria
Online Status: Offline Posts: 1
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Posted: October.08.06 at 12:02am | IP Logged
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Remaking resopads??
Is this something like "suffering is good for the soul" thing?
You can get a complete set of res-o-pads for any brand of saxophones from MusicMedic for about 30 bucks. How much your time worth?
GT
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DaveWeiner Technician
Joined: January.19.05 Location: USA
Online Status: Offline Posts: 10
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Posted: July.26.07 at 5:49pm | IP Logged
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ResoPads are available from Ferree's. I order sets for repads.
You just can't make a good sax pad without a die. And yes, the Reso-Pad rings are wider than the pad cup, so
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