[LUTE] Re: Hard shell cases for air travel

2009-06-17 Thread David van Ooijen
A lute playing friend of mine, who travels a lot between Europe and
Japan, wraps his hard cases (Kingham, whatever) in a double layer of
thick bubble wrap. He makes a 'case' of the bubble wrap, lid closed
with tape, so he can reuse it on the way back. If the case is light
and looks fragile, perhaps air port personell will be more carefull.
If it's heavy (flight case), they will be more likely to drop it. I
have a made to measure flight case for an 8-course. Too heavy, I never
used it ...

David - extra seat or 6-course when flying

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David van Ooijen
davidvanooi...@gmail.com
www.davidvanooijen.nl
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[LUTE] Re: Hard shell cases for air travel

2009-06-16 Thread Robert Clair
This comes up periodically, so search the archives. I don't have time  
for the full lecture but a summary:


Choosing a case requires a bit of thinking about what you are trying  
to do. Simply getting a hard shell case doesn't solve everything. A  
case can provide some or all the following:


* moisture protection

* thermal protection

* puncture protection

* impact protection

The last is frequently the main problem. An improperly fitted hard  
shell case will provide puncture protection but not necessarily   
impact protection. If the lute can shift in the case, and what stops  
it from moving is a peg or a base rider, they are in danger of being  
sheared off, even in a hard case.


The usual proverb is that it is easy to pack a light bulb and easy to  
pack a hammer, but very difficult to pack a light bulb AND a hammer in  
the same package.  Theorbos and such are a light bulb and a hammer,  
all in one convenient item. The neck is quite massive and if the  
instrument is held vertically and dropped and the only thing that can  
apply force to stop the neck is the join with the body, you have a  
recipe for splinters.


You can solve almost anything with enough money, mass and padding.  
Most oboists just carry their instrument with them. But people who  
play traveling shows and play oboe, flute, sax and what have you, all  
in the same night, often have the instruments moved by the crew. I  
once saw an Anvil case for an oboe (about three times the size of a  
normal oboe case) demonstrated in a store. They put a brand new ($3K  
in 1980, $7K + now) Loree oboe in it and then knocked it off the  
display counter onto the floor. They oboe did better than the  
onlookers' nerves.


..Bob
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