T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2029.1 | Electronics Should Do Fine | AQUA::ROST | Dennis Dunaway Fan Club | Tue Nov 13 1990 14:42 | 6 |
| I have kept electronic gear stored in unheated places like garages and
enclosed porches over many winters and have yet to see a problem. I
certainly wouldn't leave my guitars out there, but you said you
already brought them inside, so...
Brian
|
2029.2 | | GSRC::COOPER | MIDI Rack Puke | Tue Nov 13 1990 14:56 | 6 |
| Only thing I might think about is letting electronic gadgets
warm up to room temp before applying voltage. Definately
keep the guits warm though.
jc
|
2029.3 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | Life, a state of cluster transition | Tue Nov 13 1990 15:05 | 4 |
| Thx so-far boyths....
(by the way fwiw.. --- everyone has always said the same thing as
what's in these tow replys...)
|
2029.4 | I got Blistex on my fingers!!! (Bwaaank!) | DCSVAX::COTE | Can't touch this... | Tue Nov 13 1990 17:36 | 15 |
| Hmmm.... one thing you *may* want to take into consideration...
I'd bet that room (I've been in it) could get colder than 50 degrees.
Since that's where you wash and dry your skivvies there's gonna be
some moisture in the air. I doubt you'll get cold enough to form
ice though...
My whole house could hit 50 without the thermostat kicking the heat on.
(I just got home and it was 54 inside. That's where the thermostat was
set.) Who knows what it would have been if it was unheated?
Probably a minor concern?
Edd
|
2029.5 | more cold poop...??.. | JUPITR::TASHJIAN | | Wed Nov 14 1990 04:20 | 11 |
| Smart move on the guitars. One should avoid cold with wood.
Just a quick note if yer amp is tube. ALWAYS let the amp warm up,
without a signal, with the amp on standby for about 5 mins before you
use it after storing it in cold, or moving it in/out of cold
vans/trucks.
The glass will sometimes crack (EL34s are a BIG problem here).
Jay
|
2029.6 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | Life, a state of cluster transition | Wed Nov 14 1990 09:22 | 11 |
| re:4, 54!! Cote, your gonna freeze your cat you cheap SOB...
re:5, all solid state, good point thou..
Geesh,
I've gotta get some heat in there...
|
2029.7 | | PNO::HEISER | rock the hell out of you | Wed Nov 14 1990 11:04 | 3 |
| > Smart move on the guitars. One should avoid cold with wood.
good thing I live in Phoenix ;-)
|
2029.8 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | the forecast calls for pain | Wed Nov 14 1990 11:27 | 7 |
|
It seems like moving from a cold to warm air space could also
cause condensation to occur on the electronic components. I'd
find room elsewhere in the house if possible where there is
climate control.
fwiw
|
2029.9 | extremes | BUSY::JACQUES_FIS | | Thu Nov 15 1990 12:34 | 9 |
| Any temperature extreme is bad for wooden instuments. Also, extreme
dryness is just as dangerous (if not more so) than extreme humidity.
High humidity will cause wood to swell, and glue joints to fail.
Extreme dryness will cause cracking, especially in areas under stress
(ie: the neck heel, and soundboard). That's why they make guitar
humidifiers which plug into the soundhole, and moisturize the guitar
to prevent excessive dryness.
Mark
|
2029.10 | Storage question | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Good rhythms to bad rubbish | Mon Jun 20 1994 11:09 | 16 |
| I'm buying a new bass, and would like to keep my current instrument as
a backup. I probably won't play it much any more but I'd like to keep
it in its case in an almost-ready-to-play state, more or less
indefinitely.
It's a 1970 Gibson EB-0: SG-style mahogany body with mahogany glued-in
neck. It has always been extremely stable, staying in tune through all
sorts of temperature and humidity changes. I figured the best thing
would be to keep it at room temperature and humidity, not in the attic
or basement.
Should I detune the strings a couple of semitones? Or all the way? I
want to be able to tune it up quickly if I need it, but it will most
likely stay in this state of limbo until they bury me with it.
Dave
|
2029.11 | The bends | JUPITR::DERRICOJ | Doppler Car-Horn Junkie | Mon Jun 20 1994 11:29 | 19 |
|
> Should I detune the strings a couple of semitones? Or all the way? I
> want to be able to tune it up quickly if I need it, but it will most
> likely stay in this state of limbo until they bury me with it.
You don't want to detune the bass all the way. The truss rod and strings
are counteracting each other. When you loosen the strings, you pull all the
tension off the neck (in one direction). The truss rod will want to pull the
neck in the other direction and will put a reverse bow on it.
When you tune it up again, you would have to wait a while for the neck to
restablize - a day to a week??. Then the truss rod will most likely have to
be re-tensioned. Detuning it a third or so, should keep a moderate amount of
pull to keep it stable.
/John
|
2029.12 | | E::EVANS | | Mon Jun 20 1994 15:55 | 8 |
|
My vote is to not detune. Clean it up - sure. Put new strings on - if needed.
Put it in its case and put it somewhere with standard house temperature and
humidity (under the bed is OK, in the attic or basement is questionable).
Take it out once every year or two.
Jim
|
2029.13 | keep it at pitch | RANGER::WEBER | | Tue Jun 21 1994 07:47 | 5 |
| Guitars (and even basses) are designed to be tuned to pitch. I never
detune them unless it's for shipping. Long term storage is no different
from keeping it tuned and playing it every day.
Danny W.
|
2029.14 | | LEDS::BURATI | be like boy | Tue Jun 21 1994 09:55 | 4 |
| Question, Danny, why detune for shipping? Just to lessen the stress on
the instrument in the event of a water landing or some such other
mishap?
--Ron
|
2029.15 | avoiding shipping damage | RANGER::WEBER | | Tue Jun 21 1994 11:09 | 25 |
| Probably the most common shipping damage I hear about is the
peghead snapping off. Shippers have a tendency to drop packages flat
when loading or unloading, and when they put a guitar box upright, it
often gets knocked over. Either situation puts a great deal of stress
on the peghead joint. When I ship a guitar, I usually support the
peghead with balled paper and detune the string a full tone or more to
reduce the tension on the peghead.
If the guitar is a fine old archtop, I go further by completely
loosening the strings, stowing the bridge in the case compartment,
securing the hardware with masking tape and slipping paper between the
strings and the fretboard. I've never had a guitar suffer shipping
damage, but then, none of the guitars I've received that were
factory-packed, tuned to pitch and ready to play have ever been
damaged, either.
In any case, I never found that it hurt to lower the tension for
shipping. There is no truth to the story that removing all string
tension will damage a neck. The neck will straighten or even back-bow
while the tension is off and then return to its proper shape when the
strings are tightened. On the other hand, I'd rather keep the neck at
its normal tension for longer periods.
Danny W.
|
2029.16 | | GOES11::HOUSE | How could I have been so blind? | Tue Jun 21 1994 12:25 | 7 |
| When I recently shipped a guitar, the counterperson at UPS asked me if
the strings were detuned before accepting it. In that particular case,
the guitar had a Floyd Rose style tremelo, so I "detuned" it by putting
keepers made from cardboard in the tremelo. It shipped safely and my
friend said it popped right into tune when he took them out.
Greg
|
2029.17 | | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Good rhythms to bad rubbish | Thu Jun 23 1994 12:46 | 4 |
| Thanks for the advice, folks. I've decided just to polish it and keep
it at pitch. We'll just *see* how long it stays in tune... %^)
Dave
|