AccordionUprising
Well-known member
'Ware the proverbial, "Great deal, but..." I got the harmonéon we talked about on here a bit ago. Thanks for the help and advice getting it.
Not a scam (thank goodness) sold by a person who loved it in their childhood, but it has issues. I think it's salvageable, but has a bit of that moldy smell
. Nothing is perfect, for 1/3 the price others are asking. If a bit of effort saves it, it's worth it to me. Better than seeing such an unusual instrument go to waste.
So, my "Save the Harmonéon" campaign begins.
I saw @JIM D.'s advice on this classic "smelly accordion" thread, to use a 50/50 vinegar/rubbing-alcohol mix and (careful not to damage the bellows etc) clean the whole thing.
Over on Reddit somebody recommended against cleaning with alcohol because it might damage the celluloid parts? So maybe I'll only use it on the interior. They suggested alternating vinegar and hydrogen peroxide rather than the alcohol. But a warning: Don't Mix the Vinegar and H2O2. (I'm barely smart enough to have looked that up before I tried it.)
I'm thinking I'll try alternating cleaning the insides with the alcohol/vinegar mix, and drying before using the H2O2. Repeating a few times With lots of airing with fans blowing over them. If I had UV light equipment I'd try that too.
Any further advice is welcome. It's a pretty cool instrument. No bellows-locking strap
. But very well-sealed bellows, so it almost holds itself together? Never seen that before. It's a smaller instrument so maybe a bare bones model. Does anybody regularly leave off bellows fasteners?
Also, the lower shoulder-strap bracket is attached on the belly-side, rather than the bottom. Is that a common feature anywhere? Seems less stable, and gouges into your belly, doesn't it? I might want to move that to the bottom. Are these common features on French accordions? I've only ever dealt with Italian, German, and a few Russian designs and am aware the French have unique designs.
Continuing a pleasant adventure! Someday I can start considering actually learning to play the thing.
Not a scam (thank goodness) sold by a person who loved it in their childhood, but it has issues. I think it's salvageable, but has a bit of that moldy smell

So, my "Save the Harmonéon" campaign begins.
I saw @JIM D.'s advice on this classic "smelly accordion" thread, to use a 50/50 vinegar/rubbing-alcohol mix and (careful not to damage the bellows etc) clean the whole thing.
Over on Reddit somebody recommended against cleaning with alcohol because it might damage the celluloid parts? So maybe I'll only use it on the interior. They suggested alternating vinegar and hydrogen peroxide rather than the alcohol. But a warning: Don't Mix the Vinegar and H2O2. (I'm barely smart enough to have looked that up before I tried it.)
I'm thinking I'll try alternating cleaning the insides with the alcohol/vinegar mix, and drying before using the H2O2. Repeating a few times With lots of airing with fans blowing over them. If I had UV light equipment I'd try that too.
Any further advice is welcome. It's a pretty cool instrument. No bellows-locking strap

Also, the lower shoulder-strap bracket is attached on the belly-side, rather than the bottom. Is that a common feature anywhere? Seems less stable, and gouges into your belly, doesn't it? I might want to move that to the bottom. Are these common features on French accordions? I've only ever dealt with Italian, German, and a few Russian designs and am aware the French have unique designs.
Continuing a pleasant adventure! Someday I can start considering actually learning to play the thing.
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