Beautiful Bach Corporation 42B with leaky valve

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thatme
Posts: 175
Joined: Aug 21, 2018

by thatme »

I picked up this Bach Corporation 42B a few weeks ago and brought it to the shop. The shop did a great job removing the lacquer, polishing it up, knocking out a few small dents, fixing the water key, etc. and I was psyched to pick it up today. Unfortunately, the valve is pretty leaky. The tech spent a lot of time on it, added some heavier oil, etc... and it didn’t seem to make a difference - I think the valve is toast. There’s a lot of play between the valve and the casing. I hadn’t played it before I dropped it off because the slide had a small ding, the water key was gone, etc... my mistake.

What are my options? Replace with a new valve, possibly convert to something else? I’m not sure if I want to do either of those things and may just sell it to recoup my investment. It’s definitely a horn worth saving and it’s in amazing shape otherwise. Thoughts/estimates welcome - if I did convert to a different type of valve (Thayer - is that possible?), what would that potentially cost?

Thanks all for any thoughts!

EDIT: the shop said if they could get a new rotor from Bach, it would run ~$700 for the rotor + install. He also said I could be on the look out for an old horn with a good rotor that we could swap in, but I worry that I wouldn’t be in a position to evaluate what is a “good” rotor that we could potentially swap in.
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SwissTbone
Posts: 1138
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by SwissTbone »

Hm I would contact long island brass. He has some spare Rotax valves lying around and seems to be pretty good at doing such jobs.
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BGuttman
Posts: 7368
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by BGuttman »

There are Axial and Hagmann conversion kits available (valve plus tubing) and it will cost circa $1200 for a full installation.

It's possible to plate up the rotor, but ti still will cost a couple of hundred dollars (but the low hundreds).
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Burgerbob
Posts: 6327
Joined: Apr 23, 2018

by Burgerbob »

The bearing could be swedged on the rotor. Just saved a 50 rotor this way.

Instrument innovations also has Blessing rotors that are the same dimensions and will basically be plug and play (as far as replacing a valve).
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thatme
Posts: 175
Joined: Aug 21, 2018

by thatme »

[quote="BGuttman"]There are Axial and Hagmann conversion kits available (valve plus tubing) and it will cost circa $1200 for a full installation.

It's possible to plate up the rotor, but ti still will cost a couple of hundred dollars (but the low hundreds).[/quote]

Who sells those types of conversion kits? That’s probably beyond what I want to spend, but maybe not, we’ll see.
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thatme
Posts: 175
Joined: Aug 21, 2018

by thatme »

[quote="cozzagiorgi"]Hm I would contact long island brass. He has some spare Rotax valves lying around and seems to be pretty good at doing such jobs.[/quote]

I will, thank you!
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thatme
Posts: 175
Joined: Aug 21, 2018

by thatme »

[quote="Burgerbob"]The bearing could be swedged on the rotor. Just saved a 50 rotor this way.

Instrument innovations also has Blessing rotors that are the same dimensions and will basically be plug and play (as far as replacing a valve).[/quote]

Thanks for the tip, I had not heard of them before.
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tbonesullivan
Posts: 1959
Joined: Jul 02, 2019

by tbonesullivan »

Instrument Innovations makes great stuff. I think their own rotary valve designs run $195 for just the rotors. Their Axial Flow valves are also very nice as well, and definitely more economical than Shires or Edwards. They seem to be much more of a machine shop setup, which would allow for less overhead due to higher volume.
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brassmedic
Posts: 1447
Joined: Dec 14, 2018

by brassmedic »

Rebuilding the rotor would be less than $700.
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hornbuilder
Posts: 1384
Joined: May 02, 2018

by hornbuilder »

First step would be to plate the rotor and re-fit. That will take care of the leaks and not cost a huge amount of money. "Then" you can look at replacing parts if it doesn't play the way you want.
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thatme
Posts: 175
Joined: Aug 21, 2018

by thatme »

[quote="hornbuilder"]First step would be to plate the rotor and re-fit. That will take care of the leaks and not cost a huge amount of money. "Then" you can look at replacing parts if it doesn't play the way you want.[/quote]

Thank you. My tech mentioned that possibility but didn’t seem excited about pursuing it for some reason (must be something he was seeing). That being said, ballpark, what would that cost?
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paulyg
Posts: 689
Joined: May 17, 2018

by paulyg »

Just FYI I think others have mentioned this, but the Instrument Innovations rotary + Corp. Bach 42 is an AMAZING combination!

Eric Edwards has done a couple of these at least... one came through my hands with the original closed wrap, and played incredible. Eric also works some magic with the brace placement that helps the response quite a bit.
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Bonearzt
Posts: 833
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by Bonearzt »

[quote="paulyg"]Just FYI I think others have mentioned this, but the Instrument Innovations rotary + Corp. Bach 42 is an AMAZING combination!

Eric Edwards has done a couple of these at least... one came through my hands with the original closed wrap, and played incredible. Eric also works some magic with the brace placement that helps the response quite a bit.[/quote]
Thank you Sir!!

Eric
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thatme
Posts: 175
Joined: Aug 21, 2018

by thatme »

[quote="Bonearzt"]<QUOTE author="paulyg" post_id="89689" time="1563161972" user_id="3299">
Just FYI I think others have mentioned this, but the Instrument Innovations rotary + Corp. Bach 42 is an AMAZING combination!

Eric Edwards has done a couple of these at least... one came through my hands with the original closed wrap, and played incredible. Eric also works some magic with the brace placement that helps the response quite a bit.[/quote]
Thank you Sir!!

Eric
</QUOTE>

Eric - I sent you an email this morning, please let me know if you didn’t receive.

And thanks for the recommendations everyone - I’m leaning toward getting a new valve and fixing the horn, but we’ll see.
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Bonearzt
Posts: 833
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by Bonearzt »

[quote="thatme"]<QUOTE author="Bonearzt" post_id="89710" time="1563199467" user_id="54">
Thank you Sir!!

Eric[/quote]
Eric - I sent you an email this morning, please let me know if you didn’t receive.

And thanks for the recommendations everyone - I’m leaning toward getting a new valve and fixing the horn, but we’ll see.
</QUOTE>

Yes Sir I did
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greenbean
Posts: 1958
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by greenbean »

Me? I would get a Rotax or Innovations rotor and have Eric Edwards do the work.
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pedrombon
Posts: 417
Joined: Apr 11, 2018

by pedrombon » (edited 2019-08-05 11:44 a.m.)

Eric Edwards advised me to install the Instrument Innovations Rotary on my 42B, and both my tech here in Spain (he is also a trombone player) and me we're very pleased with the quality of the valve and how it works/sounds.

Thanks for your help and advice every time I have needed you, amigo Eric!
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Bonearzt
Posts: 833
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by Bonearzt »

Gracias Amigos!!!!!!
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LeTromboniste
Posts: 1634
Joined: Apr 11, 2018

by LeTromboniste »

Hagmann kit can be ordered from Hagmann. That valve is a really great fit for a 42. But it is super pricey and it means changing the whole wrap (and making it open wrapped). It would open up the response and brighten the sound a bit, which can or not be an improvement depending on how it plays a is. If it plays exactly the way you want now, you're probably better with a cheaper option that preserves the original wrap.