donn wrote: ↑Sun Dec 27, 2020 9:04 pm
Pardon the thread resurrection, but since another current thread has mentioned red brass and Kanstul's special alloy ...
The way I read this thread, as of last summer, no one really had any idea whether Kanstul was using some kind of red brass, or if it really is bronze. I'm guessing they have never actually said, in print, that it's bronze, and in any case it's lamentably common to refer to some kinds of brass as "bronze".
Someone (known by many here) called up on the phone one time and reported that a shaving from one of those reddish Kanstul instruments came back (from a metal test) as bronze (some allow which prominently features copper and tin).
I didn't want to report it here, because I didn't conduct the test, I never saw the sample being taken from a Kanstul instrument, I never saw the test results, and I really didn't understand what motivated the person to have the metal tested (perhaps their own experience with Grand Rapids instruments, and their own immediate recognition at the lack of a color match...??)...though my own eyes had already told me that it (the alloy) likely had little to do with what was used to build brass instruments in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Someone brought one of their quite reddish hue C instruments into my shop - a few years ago - with some large dents in the bottom bow. At first, I judged the instrument's owner as quite careless - considering the large size of the dents...until I began removing them...which (well...) was really, REALLY easy to do.
One thing is for certain:
Every manufacturer has its champions.
Every manufacturer has its detractors.
Every manufacturer has its eye-rollers.
me...??
Regardless of how great or crappy I rate someone's bells, bottom bows, valves, alloys, or whatever, they can do something (whether extraordinarily well, not particularly well, or somewhere in-between) that I cannot do - that being: fabricating instruments from raw materials (whether or not those materials are what was claimed).