Ventura
Been here for ages!
personally i would not use plastic reed valves if you paid me and gave them to me for free
forever i have been using Ike's refurbishing tip of taking old decent leathers and
giving them a light coat of Lexol then rolling them opposite and leaving them sit for
a night then flattening them out on a piece of Waxed paper until you use them
leather is leather.. i figure if lexol can soften and re-juvenate my old leather Bikers jacket, it can soften
accordion leathers too, and it does.
forever i have been butchering useless junk accordions for reed leathers.. just think,
$20 bucks for 300 or 400 leathers and lots of other good parts too
forever i have been visiting the high end expensive Furniture stores that typically have
hundreds even thousands of approx 1foot square leather samples in tons of colors and finishes
for people to see, feel, take home, compare, etc. Often these stores throw away hundreds of
leather samples when a new line of Sofa's and chairs replace an old series
i have gotten literally thousands of these for free over the years
many are suitable for accordion use.. i mean these are superfine italian leathers in many cases..
pick out the right thickness, finish, get a line on the grain and cut out your own valves,
key-facings, gaskets, keybedliners, etc. I ended up with so much damn leather i would cut
my own gaskets whenever i replaced a Speaker in one of my cabinets, and lined the bottoms
of many Equipment cases too.
forever i have been using the indian head shellac because i was already using it on
my 1963 mercury comet station wagon oil pan (my first car) that i completely rebuilt..
i figured if it can hold a 6 cylinder motor together it can hold a reedvalve just fine
and it does
just sayin' buy some expensive but good valve leathers from a supplier if you
want to save time, but don't think you have to be stuck using that mylar and
other snappy noisy flappy plastic junk
really, just pick up a good pair of scissors and make your own
swipe the leather samples if you have to or just bring them back to the
store a little smaller than they were when you "borrowed" them
just sayin'
forever i have been using Ike's refurbishing tip of taking old decent leathers and
giving them a light coat of Lexol then rolling them opposite and leaving them sit for
a night then flattening them out on a piece of Waxed paper until you use them
leather is leather.. i figure if lexol can soften and re-juvenate my old leather Bikers jacket, it can soften
accordion leathers too, and it does.
forever i have been butchering useless junk accordions for reed leathers.. just think,
$20 bucks for 300 or 400 leathers and lots of other good parts too
forever i have been visiting the high end expensive Furniture stores that typically have
hundreds even thousands of approx 1foot square leather samples in tons of colors and finishes
for people to see, feel, take home, compare, etc. Often these stores throw away hundreds of
leather samples when a new line of Sofa's and chairs replace an old series
i have gotten literally thousands of these for free over the years
many are suitable for accordion use.. i mean these are superfine italian leathers in many cases..
pick out the right thickness, finish, get a line on the grain and cut out your own valves,
key-facings, gaskets, keybedliners, etc. I ended up with so much damn leather i would cut
my own gaskets whenever i replaced a Speaker in one of my cabinets, and lined the bottoms
of many Equipment cases too.
forever i have been using the indian head shellac because i was already using it on
my 1963 mercury comet station wagon oil pan (my first car) that i completely rebuilt..
i figured if it can hold a 6 cylinder motor together it can hold a reedvalve just fine
and it does
just sayin' buy some expensive but good valve leathers from a supplier if you
want to save time, but don't think you have to be stuck using that mylar and
other snappy noisy flappy plastic junk
really, just pick up a good pair of scissors and make your own
swipe the leather samples if you have to or just bring them back to the
store a little smaller than they were when you "borrowed" them
just sayin'