Only advice I would give with acetone is that it attacks very quickly some
kinds of plastic; therefore if your wheel has a plastic band instead of a
wooden one.... I do not know if it may eventually swell the polymer. Acetone
is a much more powerful solvent (we used it in the lab to clean dirty
flasks...) than alcohol, so you have to take care about where you drop it.





2007/4/13, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

 My recipe is to dissolve rosin in acetone to a saturated solution then
dilute 1 part of that solution with a further 3 parts of acetone.

 This gives a strong enough mix for coating strings in the cottoning area.
I don't use it on the wheel personally.

You can get a bottle ready mixed in a brush applicator bottle from my site
if you like. It's on the accessory page.

Neil

 http://www.hurdy-gurdy.org.uk




----- Original Message -----
*From:* Eaton Mike <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
*To:* '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
 *Sent:* Thursday, April 12, 2007 5:09 PM
*Subject:* [HG] Liquid Rosin


Hello Neil,

Gave your advice a quick go at lunchtime and got a dramatic improvement -
thanks!  I think my mistake was believing that liquid rosin (which I
normally use) clears the wheel of the old rosin layer as well as applying a
new layer. Clearly that was not the case.

Are there any users of liquid rosin out there who can share
advice/experience on this?

Also, I'm running short of liquid rosin and need to make some more up.
Can anyone supply a recipe?

Mike

-----Original Message-----
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
*Sent:* 12 April 2007 10:51
*To:* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*Subject:* Re: [HG] Quick translation of the text on Simon's homepage

Hi Mike

Sounds like you have an accumulation of old rosin & general crud on your
wheel.

 Normal playing is constantly smoothing the rosin layer and putting a
polish on it in one direction- imagine stroking a hedgehog. When you turn
the wheel the other way, the string is being bowed against the direction of
polish and so gives a stronger friction.

I suggest you get out the fine ( 400 grit) wet and dry abrasive, wrap it
tightly round a flat block of wood and press it against the rapidly turning
wheel. Change the face of the abrasive regularly and continue until there is
no shiny spot on the paper.

 You will now have removed all the accumulated crud and can lightly add
rosin.

Incidentally, Cliff Stapleton told me years ago that does this routine
before each cotton renewal.

Good luck

Neil

 http://www.hurdy-gurdy.org.uk

http://www.myspace.com/neilbrook



----- Original Message -----
*From:* Eaton Mike <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
*To:* '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
*Sent:* Thursday, April 12, 2007 10:16 AM
*Subject:* RE: [HG] Quick translation of the text on Simon's homepage


 All,

Now here's an interesting thing.  My low D chanter has been squealing at
me for a couple of weeks  - jumping into harmonics.  I've tried all the
usual tricks:  shimming the string to reduce the pressure, replacing the
cotton, applying rosin to the string before replacing the cotton, taking the
rosin off the wheel and replacing it afresh, changing the string for a brand
new one ... nothing has worked.

And yet, if I turn the handle backwards, it plays as sweet as can be.

What's going on here  - can anyone offer an explanation for this?

Mike

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or covered by legal professional privilege.

If you have received this email in error, please notify either the sender
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Whilst we have taken reasonable precautions to ensure that any attachment
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damage sustained as a result of software viruses, and would advise that you
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