It's done~
Actually done with the project some hours ago, just had too much fun playing with my new creation 
#KattWorkshop #Harmonica #Munnspill #Munspel #Mundharmonika #Modding #DIY
It's done~
Actually done with the project some hours ago, just had too much fun playing with my new creation 
#KattWorkshop #Harmonica #Munnspill #Munspel #Mundharmonika #Modding #DIY
Pro tip: It's perfectly okay to use your 3D printers as a heating table for your wax 
#KattWorkshop #Harmonica #Munnspill #Munspel #Mundharmonika #Modding #DIY #3Dprinter #Wax
Been a while since I posted about my harmonica work.
Been working on a 14-hole Hohner Marine band as of late, rather infamous diatonic harmonica in that it was frequently used by Sonny Boy Williamson II (in the key of G, and it went under the name "Echo Vamper" back then).
It came in an almost perfect condition, but it was kept in a Polypropylene plastic case for years. Its like THE plastic where when it goes bad, not only is the smell something aweful, but the aromatic compouds also will leech onto just about anything.
It's however fixable, assuming you got the patience for soaking it in alcohol for days and stripping the paint fully. And since I'm already opening the harp up, I might as well mod it to my liking
#KattWorkshop #Harmonica #Munnspill #Munspel #Mundharmonika #Modding #DIY
Been working on some other projects recently thats taken a lot of time, but finished up a new custom harmonica design two days ago. Don't have a lot of progress shots, but in a nutshellf I modified the shield plates (the silvery ones) to be more open, allowing them to propagate sound much better. Basically taking these budget harmonicas and making them into top-shelf ones
(🧵 cont.)
So when I posted this I was already done with the cleanup, but I'm terrible at posting
When you're trying to remove oxides and other blemishes on metal, preferably you want a solution that attacks everything but the base metal.
Before I've used a concentrated solution of vinegar, salt and flour to create a paste that do indeed remove oxides and other ickyness. However it's not been ideal in that leaving an object too long in it causes acid damage, and it's much less controllable due to the amount of oxides or dirt differing from spot to spot.
The new recipe which works fantastically, is a solution of citric acid, baking soda, and soap, and came to my attention from the Backyards Ballistic, who does like restoration video of antique guns. And it works! I've been scouring the webs since like last summer finding a recipe that doesn't involve overly dangerous chemicals, 2/3rds which I can't even get in Europe.
I'd love for someone with better chemistry knowledge than me to explain why it works, but according to him it works through "chelation". My wild guess is with the right pH, the Citric acid acts as an chelating agent?
The baking soda is just for pH adjustment as far as I know, and the soap just acts as a soap
Getting to the point tho, all the crusty oxidation after 3 days was gone. And I got myself a surprise. During the cleaning run I was a bit worried because flakes of brass kept falling off.
In turn I was wondering if the sollution somehow enabled a "dezincification" effect, which is the only way for brass to actually "rust".
It made me think, maybe the solution was removing material and the plates being in such bad condition that was enough for the oxidation process to rapidly start over and over.
But it was not, luckily! The reeds themselves are brass, and didn't suffer any such. Rather both reed plates were brass coated! :blobpika But the oxidation and corrosion once put in the cleaning solution revealed that the coating itself was no longer bonded properly to the base metal, which was tin!
And that's the final clue to its age! Harmonica reed plates are normally made of brass, and sometimes steel. But tin is very much unheard of. Tin is a soft metal, and such it's not super ideal for being the base metal for riveting reeds onto that needs to stay put with abuse; after a while the rivets can loosen.
But with WWII going on, steel and brass was very expensive, with the whole war going on and all that. So as a cost saving measure, they just plated tin and called it a day! 
#harmonica #munspill #munspel #mundharmonika #repair #KattWorkshop

(🧵 cont.)
Hohner would do various regional versions of their harmonicas, at least as far as I can tell for Sweden and Norway. For example, "Paa Sydpolen" ("On the South Pole") was a regional of a similar tremolo harp, commemorating Roald Amundsen's expedition to the South Pole.
Specifically for this harp, "Jödde" refers to Carl Petter Rosén, a folk musician that performed using a mix of humor and rural tales as the character "Jödde". His specific performance style coined him the originator of the "bondkomik" genre ("Farmer comedy"), which I guess made him prominent enough for Hohner to make a commemorative harmonica in his name.
Bondkomik was popular up till WWII, so this is another clue dating it from then 
#harmonica #munspill #munspel #mundharmonika #repair #KattWorkshop
(🧵 cont.)
I don't play the tremolo harmonica, but it peaked my interest because of one of the shield plates
It's actually rather hard to date harmonicas, because since basically 1850s the overall design hasn't changed in the slightest; most companies make harmonicas to the patents from that era.
Also means that a lot of harmonica parts is in fact interchangeable, which is nice.
The like more detailed shield plate has a motif that basically all Hohner harmonicas has, two hands holding a ring and various references to past events or prominent people in the company. But around 1937 Hohner stopped adding the star to their plates, making this a harmonica from WWII
Hohner hasn't given a public reason for why, but it's not hard to guess it would have something to do with them being a German company under the Nazi regime 
#harmonica #munspill #munspel #mundharmonika #repair #KattWorkshop
By popular demand, here's one of the latest harmonica projects I'm working on
I bought this old vintage tremolo harmonica for 50 kroners (5€). Seller said it was in "good condition" but at a glance you can see something isn't exactly right. However I've gotten more comfortable with my skills as a harpsmith, and this shouldn't be too hard to fix, right? Also 50 kroners for a harmonica is bargain
Got quite the suprise when I opened it up, I've never seen this kind of corrosion before on reed plates. 
Normally brass will never corrode, unless it's kept in an really bad environment, so wherever this harmonica was stored it was not happy to say the least 
(Press "expand post" to see the rest of the thread🧵)
#harmonica #munspill #munspel #mundharmonika #repair #KattWorkshop