Lacquer composition seems to be an interesting topic around here lately (http://www.dwerden.com/forum/showthr...2#.XmrnjUplA2w see posts 13, 14, and 15). So I thought that I would ask my question. Can you tell whether a horn has nitrocellulose or epoxy lacquer by looking at it? If so, what do you look for? A lot of us buy horns with only a few digital pictures to go on. It would be nice if a picture could tell us about the lacquer too.
If there is not a characteristic look to nitrocellulose versus epoxy lacquer, are we basically left with researching the serial number to find the age, and then researching the age to see which lacquer the manufacturer used when the horn was made?
If researching obscure horn production details is all we have to go on, maybe we can concentrate our knowledge here. If folks will chime in with the brands and models they know of, and whether the company was using nitrocellulose or epoxy lacquer, I can try to put it into a quick reference format. That should benefit the group and future tuba/euphonium buyers alike.
- Sara
If there is not a characteristic look to nitrocellulose versus epoxy lacquer, are we basically left with researching the serial number to find the age, and then researching the age to see which lacquer the manufacturer used when the horn was made?
If researching obscure horn production details is all we have to go on, maybe we can concentrate our knowledge here. If folks will chime in with the brands and models they know of, and whether the company was using nitrocellulose or epoxy lacquer, I can try to put it into a quick reference format. That should benefit the group and future tuba/euphonium buyers alike.
- Sara
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