Oberloh Woodwind and Brass Repiar
- CharlieB
- Posts: 434
- Joined: Mar 29, 2018
Kudos here to Dan'l Oberloh at Oberloh Woodwind and Brass.
He has just finished reworking a Shires slide for me. Due to several birth defects, it required serious work; a complete disassembly and rebuild. I am happy to report that the slide is now way better than when it was factory-new. A precision job, done with excellent workmanship. He can't be rushed because he is a perfectionist, and he is not cheap, but the results are well worth the time and money. Here's a video of how he makes a slide right.
http://www.oberloh.com/SPL/spl1.htm
He has just finished reworking a Shires slide for me. Due to several birth defects, it required serious work; a complete disassembly and rebuild. I am happy to report that the slide is now way better than when it was factory-new. A precision job, done with excellent workmanship. He can't be rushed because he is a perfectionist, and he is not cheap, but the results are well worth the time and money. Here's a video of how he makes a slide right.
http://www.oberloh.com/SPL/spl1.htm
- paulyg
- Posts: 689
- Joined: May 17, 2018
That's awesome!
That being said, really? A slide that bad from the Shires factory? Did they cover the re-work under warranty?
That being said, really? A slide that bad from the Shires factory? Did they cover the re-work under warranty?
- GBP
- Posts: 270
- Joined: Jun 05, 2018
That’s my friend Dan. He has been working on these tuba valves that the job was so daunting, the manufacturer past on it. He really enjoys a challenge.
- CharlieB
- Posts: 434
- Joined: Mar 29, 2018
[quote="paulyg"]That's awesome!
That being said, really? A slide that bad from the Shires factory? Did they cover the re-work under warranty?[/quote]
I chose not to fight that battle with Shires.
Instead, I paid the bucks for confidence that the work would be done right, and with no hassle.
That being said, really? A slide that bad from the Shires factory? Did they cover the re-work under warranty?[/quote]
I chose not to fight that battle with Shires.
Instead, I paid the bucks for confidence that the work would be done right, and with no hassle.
- Bonearzt
- Posts: 833
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
[quote="paulyg"]That's awesome!
That being said, really? A slide that bad from the Shires factory? Did they cover the re-work under warranty?[/quote]
It happens from EVERYONE!!! Might not have left the factory in less than playable shape, but no telling what transpired from the moment it was packaged to the moment it was unpacked.
Eric
That being said, really? A slide that bad from the Shires factory? Did they cover the re-work under warranty?[/quote]
It happens from EVERYONE!!! Might not have left the factory in less than playable shape, but no telling what transpired from the moment it was packaged to the moment it was unpacked.
Eric
- Bach5G
- Posts: 2874
- Joined: Apr 07, 2018
I once got an email from from SES telling me they’d had a problem making slides for a period and inviting me to return my slide for inspection and, if necessary, repair. It came back better but it’s still not quite as good as a used Shires slide I bought off a seller on this forum.
- tbonesullivan
- Posts: 1959
- Joined: Jul 02, 2019
I had a slide from Bach with a factory warp. Freddie at Dillon Music fixed it for me. It is now the best slide I have ever played on. The only one close is the slide on a pro-owned Yamaha YBL-613G I tried out.
Some people just have "the touch". Dan Oberloh is one of the best brass repair people in the world. There isn't much they can't fix at his shop.
Some people just have "the touch". Dan Oberloh is one of the best brass repair people in the world. There isn't much they can't fix at his shop.
- bigbandbone
- Posts: 602
- Joined: Jan 17, 2019
I just completely rebuilt an almost new, but 2end owner, Bach 42 slide. It dragged in first and second positions. The outer slides were not parallel and were twisted. The inner tubes were also not parallel.
I found the cause was that the cross brace sockets were not mounted 90* to the center axis of the tubes making it impossible to build the slide assemblies parallel and flat! Crazy!!!
No pride in workmanship or product quality.
I found the cause was that the cross brace sockets were not mounted 90* to the center axis of the tubes making it impossible to build the slide assemblies parallel and flat! Crazy!!!
No pride in workmanship or product quality.