Shortening Over sleeves.
- tromboninator4000
- Posts: 45
- Joined: Jul 16, 2019
I have a Getzen 3062 dual bore slide and I was wonder if there would be any downsides to having the oversleeves cut. As many of you know the 3062 slide is a tank. To anyone who has cut their oversleeves have you seen any benefits? and would it be worth having my oversleeves shortened?
- Bonearzt
- Posts: 833
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
It will lighten the slide quite a bit and change the response making it a bit more lively.
Eric
Eric
- tromboninator4000
- Posts: 45
- Joined: Jul 16, 2019
[quote="Bonearzt"]It will lighten the slide quite a bit and change the response making it a bit more lively.
Eric[/quote]
Thanks, Eric, Just wondering if there's a good place to start with shortening them. I feel like there is too much on right now but I also don't want them completely gone.
Eric[/quote]
Thanks, Eric, Just wondering if there's a good place to start with shortening them. I feel like there is too much on right now but I also don't want them completely gone.
- Bonearzt
- Posts: 833
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
My thought would be to cut right below the cross brace flanges so that the flanges are still on the oversleeves, gives a little more stability to the crossbrace.
They will have to be removed completely to cut & then reinstall. But your tech will know that.
They will have to be removed completely to cut & then reinstall. But your tech will know that.
- mrdeacon
- Posts: 1225
- Joined: May 08, 2018
Something to think about... Is maybe only removing the top sleeve! Rath sells slides stock like this.
I have a original Minick slide with only one sleeve. It plays really well. Gets the best of both worlds. Little more open and lively but still slots well. It is a little squirrelier than a slide with both sleeves. Doesn't lighten up the slide as much as taking off both sleeves of course...
I have a original Minick slide with only one sleeve. It plays really well. Gets the best of both worlds. Little more open and lively but still slots well. It is a little squirrelier than a slide with both sleeves. Doesn't lighten up the slide as much as taking off both sleeves of course...
- Thrawn22
- Posts: 1436
- Joined: Sep 06, 2018
[quote="mrdeacon"]Something to think about... Is maybe only removing the top sleeve! Rath sells slides stock like this.
I have a original Minick slide with only one sleeve. It plays really well. Gets the best of both worlds. Little more open and lively but still slots well. It is a little squirrelier than a slide with both sleeves. Doesn't lighten up the slide as much as taking off both sleeves of course...[/quote]
Wanting to get it done right the first time is always the goal, but mrdeacons approach is a good way to start if not the solution.
I have a original Minick slide with only one sleeve. It plays really well. Gets the best of both worlds. Little more open and lively but still slots well. It is a little squirrelier than a slide with both sleeves. Doesn't lighten up the slide as much as taking off both sleeves of course...[/quote]
Wanting to get it done right the first time is always the goal, but mrdeacons approach is a good way to start if not the solution.
- ngrinder
- Posts: 294
- Joined: Apr 24, 2018
[quote="mrdeacon"]Something to think about... Is maybe only removing the top sleeve! Rath sells slides stock like this.
I have a original Minick slide with only one sleeve. It plays really well. Gets the best of both worlds. Little more open and lively but still slots well. It is a little squirrelier than a slide with both sleeves. Doesn't lighten up the slide as much as taking off both sleeves of course...[/quote]
Which leg has the sleeve? Some (or all?) Williams horns are more weighted in the top part the handslide brace. I always thought that was interesting and assumed there was a reason for not having it equally distributed.
I have a original Minick slide with only one sleeve. It plays really well. Gets the best of both worlds. Little more open and lively but still slots well. It is a little squirrelier than a slide with both sleeves. Doesn't lighten up the slide as much as taking off both sleeves of course...[/quote]
Which leg has the sleeve? Some (or all?) Williams horns are more weighted in the top part the handslide brace. I always thought that was interesting and assumed there was a reason for not having it equally distributed.
- mrdeacon
- Posts: 1225
- Joined: May 08, 2018
[quote="ngrinder"]Which leg has the sleeve? Some (or all?) Williams horns are more weighted in the top part the handslide brace. I always thought that was interesting and assumed there was a reason for not having it equally distributed.[/quote]
The bottom tube is the one with the sleeve.
The reasoning in my head... would be it allows the top tube to resonate easier but the bottom tube with the oversleeve still helps with slotting. I mean most major companies do Bach style slides with the small sleeve on top and the long sleeve on the bottom. It isn't too much of a jump just to remove the whole top sleeve. Pure conjecture though and I have no idea if that's why Minick and Rath do it that way!
I usually like standard weight slides anyways so I really haven't done too much experimentation or tried to do this with any of my other slides. I will say on my Minick bass trombone the original slide played more open but the horn is a little squirrelly with it. When I use a normal standard weight slide with both oversleeves it slots much easier.
The bottom tube is the one with the sleeve.
The reasoning in my head... would be it allows the top tube to resonate easier but the bottom tube with the oversleeve still helps with slotting. I mean most major companies do Bach style slides with the small sleeve on top and the long sleeve on the bottom. It isn't too much of a jump just to remove the whole top sleeve. Pure conjecture though and I have no idea if that's why Minick and Rath do it that way!
I usually like standard weight slides anyways so I really haven't done too much experimentation or tried to do this with any of my other slides. I will say on my Minick bass trombone the original slide played more open but the horn is a little squirrelly with it. When I use a normal standard weight slide with both oversleeves it slots much easier.
- hyperbolica
- Posts: 3990
- Joined: Mar 23, 2018
I think the longer bottom sleeve is because that's where your hand is, and the sleeve protects the slide from chemical and mechanical damage. Also protects your hand from contact with worn/unlaquered brass.
- FOSSIL
- Posts: 688
- Joined: Jul 09, 2019
[quote="mrdeacon"]Something to think about... Is maybe only removing the top sleeve! Rath sells slides stock like this.
I have a original Minick slide with only one sleeve. It plays really well. Gets the best of both worlds. Little more open and lively but still slots well. It is a little squirrelier than a slide with both sleeves. Doesn't lighten up the slide as much as taking off both sleeves of course...[/quote]
I was helping at Rath when the single bottom oversleeve was decided on for the bronze slides. Done for sound and blow reasons with bronze slides on bell tuning versions. Tried all possible setups and everyone preferred that.
Chris
I have a original Minick slide with only one sleeve. It plays really well. Gets the best of both worlds. Little more open and lively but still slots well. It is a little squirrelier than a slide with both sleeves. Doesn't lighten up the slide as much as taking off both sleeves of course...[/quote]
I was helping at Rath when the single bottom oversleeve was decided on for the bronze slides. Done for sound and blow reasons with bronze slides on bell tuning versions. Tried all possible setups and everyone preferred that.
Chris
- Crazy4Tbone86
- Posts: 1654
- Joined: Jan 14, 2020
My recommendation is to do what Eric Edwards recommends. If you keep some of the sleeve on both slides, you have more protection from damage. When I take apart outer slides, I see MUCH MORE damage at the brace on slides that do not have sleeves than on those slides with sleeves. Those sleeves are there for acoustical reasons, but they also give protection from incidents of impact.
Think about the little accidents that happen with a trombone. Every trombone player has dropped their outer slide. If you drop a slide with sleeves on a carpeted floor, most of the time the sleeves protect the slide from being dented. However, if you drop an outer slide that does not have sleeves on a carpeted floor, there is a much higher chance of the braces creating a dent in the slide tubing from the jarring impact. Most of the time when this happens, you cannot see the dent in the outer slide because it is underneath the brace.
Think about the little accidents that happen with a trombone. Every trombone player has dropped their outer slide. If you drop a slide with sleeves on a carpeted floor, most of the time the sleeves protect the slide from being dented. However, if you drop an outer slide that does not have sleeves on a carpeted floor, there is a much higher chance of the braces creating a dent in the slide tubing from the jarring impact. Most of the time when this happens, you cannot see the dent in the outer slide because it is underneath the brace.
- Doug_Elliott
- Posts: 4155
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
Without a sleeve, the outer tube is usually distorted some from soldering at the brace, I wouldn't assume it's from damage.
- Kbiggs
- Posts: 1768
- Joined: Mar 24, 2018
Would you need to find a different post for the handbrace? I would think that the arc of the oversleeve post would be a different compared to the arc of the post for a slide tube.
- Bonearzt
- Posts: 833
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
[quote="Kbiggs"]Would you need to find a different post for the handbrace? I would think that the arc of the oversleeve post would be a different compared to the arc of the post for a slide tube.[/quote]
Not necessarily, the difference in the O.D. of both is not that much, so only a slight tweak would be necessary to fit the flanges.
Eric
Not necessarily, the difference in the O.D. of both is not that much, so only a slight tweak would be necessary to fit the flanges.
Eric