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How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Tue Oct 03, 2023 11:35 pm
by mainstay73
…with complete disassembly?
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2023 7:00 am
by norbie2018
Never. I clean individual part of the instrument but never submerse it in water.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2023 8:50 am
by tbdana
Monthly, on the first of each month. At least, for the horns I've been playing that month. They get a full bath and cleaning inside and out. I'm not into turning my horns into petri dishes for biology experiments.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2023 9:10 am
by hyperbolica
I've got several horns, so it's like changing the oil on a car - after a certain amount of usage. The bass is sensitive to getting stuff in the valves, so I clean the slide more often. Same is true for all horns, but I'm more paranoid about getting even water in the bass valves. Snake/rod as appropriate. Cheese cloth on the rod, and Dawn on the snake. I don't use the bathtub, I use a hose in the shower that puts full pressure in the slide tube. If I look down the top slide and don't like what I see, I wash it. I've got the shower right next to my instrument area, so it's easy to step in and just do it.
Cleaning the euphonium or tuba is a different issue, and takes more time and effort. Although I've heard a lot of tuba people say they don't wash at all (the tuba that is). All my worst cleaning stories come from tubas - dead mice, slime, green flakes, visible buildup... Can't even imagine what techs who clean school horns all day come across...
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2023 12:25 pm
by BGuttman
A routine bath does not involve things like disassembling a valve. You can soak an F-rotor, flush, and relube but if you find it needs disassembly it's Tech Time. I don't have a regular schedule for soak baths; just when it strikes my fancy.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2023 12:30 pm
by Burgerbob
I don't typically bathe valve sections. Slides, sure.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2023 1:16 pm
by trombonedemon
Slides get bathed every two weeks or so. For sure.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Sat Oct 14, 2023 7:55 am
by Crazy4Tbone86
BGuttman wrote: ↑Wed Oct 04, 2023 12:25 pm
A routine bath does not involve things like disassembling a valve. You can soak an F-rotor, flush, and relube but if you find it needs disassembly it's Tech Time. I don't have a regular schedule for soak baths; just when it strikes my fancy.
Yikes! Do you really place your entire bell section under water while the valve section is assembled? That is something I do not recommend. That will just encourage faster accumulation of mineral deposits in all the nooks and crannies of the valve.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Sat Oct 14, 2023 7:57 am
by harrisonreed
I wouldn't submerge the slide, either. The cork barrels definitely don't need water getting in them, especially if there is felt in there. You can funnel water through the tubes.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Sat Oct 14, 2023 8:44 am
by AndrewMeronek
I tend to focus on the mouthpiece side of the slide and clean that on a somewhat regular basis, every month or so. That's where the 'ol bodily fluids will do the most damage over time. I also try to get each horn to a professional cleaning every year.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Mon Oct 16, 2023 7:31 pm
by BrianJohnston
I get my horns professionally cleaned once a year. I clean out my slide once a month & I bathe my entire trombone every 3 months. This seems to work for me.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Mon Oct 16, 2023 7:36 pm
by dukesboneman
I use this on mine about once a week, depending on the amount of playing.
I like it because it`s long enough to clean the entire outer slide too
https://www.hickeys.com/music/brass/tro ... snake-.php
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Tue Oct 17, 2023 2:00 am
by tbonesullivan
I use the brass saver through my inner slide every time I lube it. Even with brushing teeth and rinsing etc it's amazing how fast gunk builds up.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Tue Oct 17, 2023 2:55 am
by Posaunus
tbonesullivan wrote: ↑Tue Oct 17, 2023 2:00 am
I use the brass saver through my inner slide every time I lube it. Even with brushing teeth and rinsing etc it's amazing how fast gunk builds up.
Brass Saver through inner AND outer slides (after wiping all old lube off outer surfaces of inner slides).
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Tue Oct 17, 2023 5:52 am
by Matt K
More often than I want and less often than I should.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Tue Oct 17, 2023 6:53 am
by tbonesullivan
Posaunus wrote: ↑Tue Oct 17, 2023 2:55 am
tbonesullivan wrote: ↑Tue Oct 17, 2023 2:00 am
I use the brass saver through my inner slide every time I lube it. Even with brushing teeth and rinsing etc it's amazing how fast gunk builds up.
Brass Saver through inner AND outer slides (after wiping all old lube off outer surfaces of inner slides).
For the outers I use either the SOM swabs or a rod and cheese cloth to avoid gumming up the Brass Savr brush. I do usually run it through once to get stuff out of the crook though.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Sun Oct 29, 2023 1:59 pm
by whitbey
I rinse out slides every week or two. Maybe one a month for a horn I rarely play.
Sometimes I just do a quick flush, Or I pour in white vinegar and Dawn soap. Push a snake though and maybe a bronze gun brush. Then flush it out.
The trick it the flush it out tool. I have old MP with a small shank and one with a large shank soldered to a garden hose fitting. Make the quick disconnect to my office/studio sink and turn on the water. Being able rinse everything out quick and easy is the way to go. This takes just minutes.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/15AN3J0 ... drive_link
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Wed Nov 27, 2024 5:51 pm
by JameyMorgan
Clean the slide with a non-metal brush and cleaning rod every week. Wipe off and re-apply tuning slide grease as necessary, typically every other week. I sometimes use Brasso on the slides if they're tarnishing. I may sometimes get some room-temperature dish soap and water on a towel and wipe down the exterior surfaces of the horn, but I never submerge any part in water.
I get my horns professionally cleaned once a year, or I did before I got to Hawaii.. they desperately need it now but I've tried to clean them more regularly myself here.
Re: How often do you give your trombone a bath…
Posted: Wed Nov 27, 2024 9:32 pm
by Posaunus
JameyMorgan wrote: ↑Wed Nov 27, 2024 5:51 pm
Clean the slide with a non-metal brush and cleaning rod every week. Wipe off and re-apply tuning slide grease as necessary, typically every other week. I sometimes use Brasso on the slides if they're tarnishing. I may sometimes get some room-temperature dish soap and water on a towel and wipe down the exterior surfaces of the horn, but I never submerge any part in water.
I get my horns professionally cleaned once a year, or I did before I got to Hawaii.. they desperately need it now but I've tried to clean them more regularly myself here.
Now that you've apparently moved to Hawaii, it's more important than ever to put away your trombones "dead dry" after playing. An occasional professional cleaning may help (I do not need to do that annually), but a regular hygiene protocol is mandatory to extend the efficient function (and life) of your instruments. I regularly swab both inner and outer slides with an HW Products
Brass Saver (soft brush), followed by an absorbent cloth-wrapped cleaning rod (usually a
Slide-O-Mix towel sheath) until completely dry. I don't find the need to re-apply tuning slide grease very often - it seems to last quite a while for me. I do lubricate my valves and linkages regularly - perhaps more than I need to, but lubricants are cheap. And I almost never give my trombones a bath any more - they are already meticulously cleaned by my normal hygiene protocol. With all this (and gentle wiping with a microfiber cloth) my trombones remain near perfect, with smooth slides (thank you Yamaha) and silent valves.