King Lacquer

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Bluesfish
Posts: 5
Joined: Wed Jul 10, 2019 6:02 pm

King Lacquer

Post by Bluesfish »

I have two old 2Bs from the early 40s. Been reading old posts here and the general wisdom is they used epoxy type lacquer making them a bear to strip. The question is, do we know when they started using epoxy or is that all they ever used.

Would like to have one of these stripped and restored like new or...
tbonesullivan
Posts: 1617
Joined: Tue Jul 02, 2019 9:06 am
Location: New Jersey
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Re: King Lacquer

Post by tbonesullivan »

The early 40s would be way too early for epoxy lacquer. At that time it would probably be solvent based lacquer, which is easily removable.

The "King Lacquer" everyone refers to is the 60s-70s orange/yellow lacquer that they used on bell sections for a while. I do not know if it was epoxy though, as I have heard it isn't that hard to remove, and you can use citristrip.
David S. - daveyboy37 from TTF
Bach 39, LT36B, 42BOF & 42T, King 2103 / 3b, Kanstul 1570CR & 1588CR, Yamaha YBL-612 RII, YBL-822G & YBL-830, Sterling 1056GHS Euphonium,
Livingston Symphony Orchestra NJ - Trombone
bigbandbone
Posts: 589
Joined: Thu Jan 17, 2019 7:45 am

Re: King Lacquer

Post by bigbandbone »

Many years ago when I ran the brass department in a high volume repair shop I had a hot lye tank just to strip King horns that were in for overhaul. It used to leave a lot of scale on the brass, but it was the only thing that would strip King lacquer.
Bluesfish
Posts: 5
Joined: Wed Jul 10, 2019 6:02 pm

Re: King Lacquer

Post by Bluesfish »

DB37,
Thanks, I too thought it to be too early for epoxy finishes.
BBB,
So in your experience pretty much all Kings were tougher than other brands to strip? Just curious at this point.
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