I've been putting off re-lacquering the tuba. (The original lacquer was (at first gorgeous, but) a very thin coat of nitrocellulose lacquer.
Now that I have a protective hard case (vs. an expensive padded sack), I don't have an excuse - anymore - to not pick over it, shine it up, and shoot some new clear on it, do I ?
This case is probably about the same age as my tuba, but sports no cracks, and the interior blue velvet lining is immaculate.
The wheels are still good, and I just replaced both handles (same style but real leather-over-rope, rather than plastic imitations of leather-over-rope, whereby the plastic ones - "back then" - quickly broke).
Maybe...but I haven't started repairing the tuba...and all I'm going to do to is will be to address a few shallow pings, shine it up, and shoot it.bloke,
This belongs in the "Repair" forum.
In "case" anyone wasn't aware, Jakob Winter cases are (arguably) the " of Molded Tuba Cases"
(anyway...I prefer them over any of the others, and they are NOT inexpensive. (example: https://www.ebay.com/itm/134299995937 )
I managed a trade (for something I didn't need, and which I was given) for this case.
(Good things come to those who wait...??)
I almost had a chance to give this case a test run, this-coming well. (An orchestra-sponsored brass quintet - of which I am a part - was offered some more nursing/convalescent home toot-'n'-scoot Christmas programs, but the notice was too short, and we all (a couple of us who live over 140 miles away in two different directions) just couldn't coordinate those engagements.