Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Search Result
Collapse
120 results in 0.0441 seconds.
Keywords
Members
Tags
-
There is relevant info. Summed up it is: reconsider the job...
-
Call me elitist if you want, but I won't subject my pipes to playing in harsh conditions. Not worth it. If it were something I were called on to do frequently...
Leave a comment:
-
Also, some of the piping shops sell a clip-on thumb rest that rides on your right thumb and from which the chanter can hang. That way you can play the...
Leave a comment:
-
That can certainly cause instability. I've had a set with that problem myself. But it wouldn't cause what the OP is describing.......
Leave a comment:
-
It sounds like he's already determined it's the reeds. He said with the stocks corked it's is airtight. If not then the reeds, what else could it be?...
Leave a comment:
-
It's actually a good test of the reeds. When reeds operate, they're of course closed part of the time. If while they're closed they don't seal completely,...
Leave a comment:
-
During playing you pour off from the moose valve every few sets, as I said. At the end of the session, pull the tube and dump what little might be in...
Leave a comment:
-
Right, which is why your pour off every few sets. A tube trap will then get anything that might get by....
Leave a comment:
-
Sorry I'm feeling silly -- I read the thread title and pictured a chanter sharpener. Like a pencil sharpener but bigger.....
Leave a comment:
-
Makes me think of the old bags with the huge clamp on the back end. Ugh.
Leave a comment:
-
There's a small hole in the flange through which the outer loop of the flap passes. Look closely and you'll see it. Carefully lift the loop out of its...
Leave a comment:
-
-
Leave a comment: