By
eHow Arts & Entertainment Editor
Difficulty: Moderately Easy
Things You’ll Need:
- Penetrating Oil
- Small Diameter Plumber's Snakes
- Trombone Mouthpiece Brushes
- Trombone Slide Oil
- Garden Hoses And Attachments
- Power Sprayers For Garden Hose
- Several Thick Towels
- Mild Liquid Soap
Step1
Fill your bathtub with 7 inches of lukewarm water and add one cup of mild liquid soap.
Step2
Place heavy Turkish towels on the bottom of the tub to provide protective cushioning.
Step3
Immerse the trombone pipes. Make sure the water penetrates all the tubing. Allow the horn to soak from four hours to overnight.
Step4
Take the tubing of the horn outside and fit a garden hose with a spray gun.
Step5
Wrap a towel around the spray gun nose and place the hose gun into the bell of the horn. Flush out the buildup on the inside of all the tubing with a strong stream of water.
Step6
Use a small "snake cable" with a small brush on the end to loosen rebellious dirt, and flush again.
Step7
Carefully rinse, dry and re-oil all parts. Blow the water out of all tubing. Re-assemble the instrument.
Comments
Anonymous said
on 2/28/2006 When the slide sounds scratchy, it usually means that the outer tubes are probably getting dirty. Here is a very useful tip that I often use. Use this method only for the outer slides.
1. Buy a slide cleaning rod from any music store, or borrow someone else's
2. Get a roll of cheesecloth, or an old (but clean) cotton T-shirt.
3. Wrap the shirt or cheesecloth around the slide cleaning rod (the length of the material should be about 6 inches wide and 6 inches longer than the cleaning rod).
Make sure that the cloth isn't too tightly wrapped or too loosely wrapped, because then it won't clean properly. Wrap it so that it fits snugly into the outer slide.
4. Get a can of penetrating oil such as: WD-40, TKX, or Dura Lube. Any other oil like these ones are OK. Now spray the oil on the cloth that's on the cleaning rod (it should be soaked, but not dripping wet).
5. Insert the cleaning rod into the slide. Be sure to always work on the tube you are holding, not the other. Push and pull the cleaning rod up and down the outer slide tubes for about a minute. If the cloth comes out green, brown, or black, respray the cloth with the oil and repeat step 5. If you've done it 2-3 times already, and it's still green, brown or black, then just consider it done.
6. Once you have done that, go to your bathtub or sink and run warm (not hot) water from the tap. Flush the inside of the tubes with the water until it comes out clean.
7. Dry the outside of the slide and reassemble the handslide. I recommend that you re lubricate the slide now rather than later.
8. Reassemble your trombone and away you go!
Anonymous said
on 1/26/2006 The best slide lubricant that I have come across is Slide-O-Mix. It is a silicon based lubricant that comes in two parts and is available at most music stores.
First put a drop from the small bottle on the stockings of the slide (the very ends of the silver inside parts), and reattach the slide to coat the inside with it.
Then, put a generous amount of fluid from the large bottle on the slide and make sure it gets all around the inside. If you get any on the outside, be sure to wipe it off before it dries or else it will take your lacquer with it. Different bottles vary in consistency, but I have found that the thicker the Slide-O-Mix is, the better it works.
Finally, use a spray bottle to add a fine mist of water to make your slide near perfect.
*Warning*: Hold on tight to your slide! Using a slide that moves freely when you are not used to it can cause your slide to fly off into another section of the ensemble.
Other lesser methods of slide lubrication include using a slide cream or slide oil, but I would stay away from the oil because it builds up and needs to be cleaned out.
Anonymous said
on 11/22/2005 1. Take your trombone apart, including the slide.
2. Put slide or valve oil on the silver part of the slide.
3. Put the slide back together and keep sliding it in and out until it slides smoothly.
Anonymous said
on 11/22/2005 Use lemon-scented Pledge furniture polish on the slide. Buy the liquid form, not the aerosol as the aerosol will corrode the slide over time. This is better than any slide oil or slide cream you can buy. It's cheaper and will give you a much faster slide.