Thayer SOOOOO Noisy, what can i do.
- conn88Hagmann
- Posts: 492
- Joined: Aug 09, 2018
I have an Edwards double plug bass.
Love it.
But. . . . . . . the first valve is so noisy. The second is good.
It has the plastic mini-ball holders with the metal balls.
I use Paxman rotor and baring oil and have recently started to use some Hetman oil too.
Any advise gratefully received.
Love it.
But. . . . . . . the first valve is so noisy. The second is good.
It has the plastic mini-ball holders with the metal balls.
I use Paxman rotor and baring oil and have recently started to use some Hetman oil too.
Any advise gratefully received.
- Bonearzt
- Posts: 833
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
Could be the stop arms loose on the spindles, even with the screws tight.
Loose brace nuts, worn valve spindles, loose ball ends....
MANY reasons for noise!
Loose brace nuts, worn valve spindles, loose ball ends....
MANY reasons for noise!
- WGWTR180
- Posts: 2152
- Joined: Sep 04, 2019
[quote="conn88Hagmann"]I have an Edwards double plug bass.
Love it.
But. . . . . . . the first valve is so noisy. The second is good.
It has the plastic mini-ball holders with the metal balls.
I use Paxman rotor and baring oil and have recently started to use some Hetman oil too.
Any advise gratefully received.[/quote]
Need more specifics. As Bonezart said the noise can come from many places.
Love it.
But. . . . . . . the first valve is so noisy. The second is good.
It has the plastic mini-ball holders with the metal balls.
I use Paxman rotor and baring oil and have recently started to use some Hetman oil too.
Any advise gratefully received.[/quote]
Need more specifics. As Bonezart said the noise can come from many places.
- tbonesullivan
- Posts: 1959
- Joined: Jul 02, 2019
There's a whole lot of things that could cause the noise. Is it a clunking or a grinding noise? did you lubricate all hinge points, including the miniballs? How old is the bass?
- Crazy4Tbone86
- Posts: 1654
- Joined: Jan 14, 2020
Something that I have seen quite a few times is hardened bumpers, particularly the rubber bumpers. Those rubber bumpers can get hard as steel in certain conditions. The most common culprit is leaving the trombone in your car on a constant basis. The extreme heat of summer plus/or the extreme cold of winter can make the rubber dry out and harden. Hard bumpers can create a lot noise.
- Elow
- Posts: 1924
- Joined: Mar 02, 2020
[quote="Crazy4Tbone86"]Something that I have seen quite a few times is hardened bumpers, particularly the rubber bumpers. Those rubber bumpers can get hard as steel in certain conditions. The most common culprit is leaving the trombone in your car on a constant basis. The extreme heat of summer plus/or the extreme cold of winter can make the rubber dry out and harden. Hard bumpers can create a lot noise.[/quote]
Wow, thank you. It’s constantly 90+ degrees where i’m at and i’ve been wondering why my valves are getting clankier.
Wow, thank you. It’s constantly 90+ degrees where i’m at and i’ve been wondering why my valves are getting clankier.
- Burgerbob
- Posts: 6327
- Joined: Apr 23, 2018
[quote="Elow"]<QUOTE author="Crazy4Tbone86" post_id="126794" time="1601521088" user_id="8392">
Something that I have seen quite a few times is hardened bumpers, particularly the rubber bumpers. Those rubber bumpers can get hard as steel in certain conditions. The most common culprit is leaving the trombone in your car on a constant basis. The extreme heat of summer plus/or the extreme cold of winter can make the rubber dry out and harden. Hard bumpers can create a lot noise.[/quote]
Wow, thank you. It’s constantly 90+ degrees where i’m at and i’ve been wondering why my valves are getting clankier.
</QUOTE>
That's probably just oil evaporating. I had to oil mine every other day or so when it's hot.
Something that I have seen quite a few times is hardened bumpers, particularly the rubber bumpers. Those rubber bumpers can get hard as steel in certain conditions. The most common culprit is leaving the trombone in your car on a constant basis. The extreme heat of summer plus/or the extreme cold of winter can make the rubber dry out and harden. Hard bumpers can create a lot noise.[/quote]
Wow, thank you. It’s constantly 90+ degrees where i’m at and i’ve been wondering why my valves are getting clankier.
</QUOTE>
That's probably just oil evaporating. I had to oil mine every other day or so when it's hot.
- LeoInFL
- Posts: 252
- Joined: Apr 19, 2018
Maybe these might help:
<LINK_TEXT text="https://store.edwards-instruments.com/p ... -arm-screw">https://store.edwards-instruments.com/product/stop-arm-screw</LINK_TEXT>
I noticed that Edwards is now offering "Rod End Silencers" in their online store. They cost $2.80/each and they're sort of a rubber/metal washer. I ordered (2) for my tenor thinking that since I have (2) Metal Rod Ends I would need (2) of these Silencers. My linkage wasn't noisy to begin with but I thought 'why not'. I tried installing both but the action would get really bad, binding and sticking - slow to return to the 'open' position. I ended up removing the Silencer from the Rod End closest to the valve and all is well. Do they work?? I don't notice a difference, but they may help you. Looking at the design, I think the purpose is to reduce the amount of 'rattle' when you quickly engage/release the linkage. You have a metal ball inside a metal 'hip joint' (Rod End) so it's stands to reason they will make some noise whenever you initiate movement or abruptly halt it (against a bumper). You would think that the bearing oil would 'suspend' in those open tolerances, but these Silencers are meant to reduce the rattle. Pure speculation on my part. YMMV
<LINK_TEXT text="https://store.edwards-instruments.com/p ... -arm-screw">https://store.edwards-instruments.com/product/stop-arm-screw</LINK_TEXT>
I noticed that Edwards is now offering "Rod End Silencers" in their online store. They cost $2.80/each and they're sort of a rubber/metal washer. I ordered (2) for my tenor thinking that since I have (2) Metal Rod Ends I would need (2) of these Silencers. My linkage wasn't noisy to begin with but I thought 'why not'. I tried installing both but the action would get really bad, binding and sticking - slow to return to the 'open' position. I ended up removing the Silencer from the Rod End closest to the valve and all is well. Do they work?? I don't notice a difference, but they may help you. Looking at the design, I think the purpose is to reduce the amount of 'rattle' when you quickly engage/release the linkage. You have a metal ball inside a metal 'hip joint' (Rod End) so it's stands to reason they will make some noise whenever you initiate movement or abruptly halt it (against a bumper). You would think that the bearing oil would 'suspend' in those open tolerances, but these Silencers are meant to reduce the rattle. Pure speculation on my part. YMMV