Комментарии:
FIRST!!
ОтветитьHa!
ОтветитьHi Trent
Thanks for the great video.
Also great sound effects
Where is all about french horns part 2 hammyboy
Ответитьhello from France !
very nice piece btw, but I wish you made the part on the lathe longer !
love the sound of your lathe
hows your back feeling now? is it feeling okay enough to go to band practices? i hope you're healing well.
Ответитьthis was enjoyable
ОтветитьCan you check out a marching baritone?
Ответитьjust Fyi my dad doesn't know who you are and was laughing at your dry humor along with me. Good stuff. Also well done on the fix
ОтветитьGreat video! Had me crying laughing!
ОтветитьExtremly impressive for limited practicing. Then again, who's surprised. You're THE Trent Hamilton.
Ответитьexcellent sound design.
ОтветитьNice Trent
ОтветитьThose sound effects though :D
ОтветитьKeep it up with the sound effects!
ОтветитьPlease, please so more of these
ОтветитьNice! I wish I could play that well after a 7 week lay-off.
ОтветитьWas there not enough wall thickness in the original receiver to ream it to a more suitable diameter?
ОтветитьHe's a handsome instrument; leakage at age is a charming feature.... keep saying that. You and your squeaky lathe have a bright future.
ОтветитьThe souns effects are great 👍
ОтветитьThe part where he was making the reciever was absolutely hilarious thank you for that
ОтветитьThe instrument was probably fine. He just wanted to make funny noises.
ОтветитьYour sound effects inspire me
ОтветитьSounds great Trent - especially after not practicing for 6 weeks!
ОтветитьIt’s great to see you back at it, Trent!
ОтветитьHow hard would it be to do this? Also hope you are feeling better.
ОтветитьNice work! Thank you for sharing; without these kinds of videos simple folk like myself might not open our minds to the possibilities.
ОтветитьGreat job! Looks great
ОтветитьI was dying when I heard the sound effects
ОтветитьI'm kinda surprised you don't just have a preferred mouthpiece in medium shank. They're not entirely rare. I admit that they are quite expensive, though.
As for leaks, if you just need a quick fix (aka duct tape), you can add powdered graphite to valve oil and it will seal things up pretty decently. You can also lubricate slides with graphite and multipurpose oil. Not an ideal solution, but it works and it's cheap. Powdered graphite is very inexpensive (find it at a farm supply store) and comes in quantities that should last a lifetime.
Well done for getting the taper right. I do machining and tapers are difficult.
ОтветитьLove the TrentCAD nod, also great work!
Ответитьso turning from a small bore to large bore?
ОтветитьWow cool.
ОтветитьThat sounds pretty good to me.
ОтветитьSounds good though I thought it would have been easier to turn down a standard mouthpiece to fit. They way you did it does give you greater choice of mouthpieces though.
ОтветитьHi Trent 👋, Awesome video. Just wondering the name of the roundish trumpet in the background on the left? Thanks
ОтветитьAlways great to hear that classic Boosey&Hawkes euph sound :D
Loved the quality sound effects as wel! gives your vids a bit more personality :D
Did you accidentally cut off your beard on the lathe?
ОтветитьExcellent job Trent, now turn a MP ;)
Wish my tiny workshop was big enough for a metal lathe :(
Great to see you back in the land of the living dead with the rest of us! ;-) Hope you are feeling better.
ОтветитьWhere did you purchase your tapered bit from? Thanks
ОтветитьLove the sound effects
ОтветитьThat was awesome, Trent! Hope your recovery is going well. Sending you healing vibes and love. Take it easy and take good care of yourself. Blessings.
ОтветитьSound effects worth 100million dollar
ОтветитьAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAA
ОтветитьYup, DID you get your beard your beard caught in the lathe? - and more importantly, how did you get the taper right ?
ОтветитьFIRST!
Ответить