Lead content in Chinese Flutes???
06:33 on Monday, October 19, 2009
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Re: Lead content in Chinese Flutes???
12:37 on Monday, October 19, 2009
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Re: Lead content in Chinese Flutes???
15:14 on Monday, October 19, 2009
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Re: Lead content in Chinese Flutes???
15:37 on Monday, October 19, 2009
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Re: Lead content in Chinese Flutes???
23:58 on Monday, October 19, 2009
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Re: Lead content in Chinese Flutes???
12:05 on Tuesday, October 20, 2009
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Re: Lead content in Chinese Flutes???
13:46 on Tuesday, October 20, 2009
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Re: Lead content in Chinese Flutes???
23:32 on Tuesday, October 20, 2009
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musicman_944 (257 points)
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I would be surprised if your Gemeinhardt is brass with silver plate. I can't say that it's impossible, but I've never seen one made from brass. There are many different alloys of brass and nickel silver. Nickel silver is more yellow than silver plate, but typically brass is much more yellow than nickel silver.
Yes, silver plate over nickel silver can definitely develop spots which cannot be cleaned. When there is any imperfection in the plating, the underlying base metal can corrode and appear as a dark spot. With brass, the spots tend to be a brownish-green color while on nickel silver, the spots will tend to be greyish in color.
While there are chemical-based plating compounds, the do not deposit anywhere near as much silver as electroplating and would not last very long. I would also be concerned about toxic chemical residue being left behind on any surface that comes into contact with your mouth. Most good repair shops can touch-up the plating or alternatively if you really want to do it yourself, check out Caswell Plug-n-Plate kits. Silver kits are about $40 USD, but a repair shop could probably do it for less than that.
http://www.caswellplating.com/kits/index.html
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Re: Lead content in Chinese Flutes???
16:03 on Wednesday, October 21, 2009
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Re: Lead content in Chinese Flutes???
17:59 on Wednesday, October 21, 2009
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jose_luis (2369 points)
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If my Gemeinhardt is not built out of brass, that's a good news for me. I was told the contrary some years ago, but looking carefully at the bare metal seen in the tenon, it seems a little whiter than what normal brass would be. Nickel silver, then?
I also played with mercury in my childhood. My father brought home a small bottle, we were astonished of the heavy metal inside and we performed all sort of tricks with it. There was mercury on the floor some times, though not in bed, as I can recall those times now. We collected the mercury by pushing with the fingers onto a piece of paper. It was also common that mercury thermometers broke while in use and in those cases the contents could spill on the bed and clothes.
Both my brother and me suffered a serious illness (a typhus type) when quite young; I was 8 and my brother 4 years old. We stayed in bed for almost three months, with incredibly high fevers. I still remember that my brother made the thermometers break (explode) because his fever was over 44 degr Celsius (about 111 deg Fahrenheit). So we had plenty of opportunities to get mercury spilt on us. We did not develop any visible consequence because of the fever or the mercury. But we escaped an almost sure death quite closely: a new antibiotic was put in the market just in time to save our lives. It was Squibb's Chloromicetin, or Cloranfenicol). It is still used these days to treat those fevers, many decades after that.
Sorry for the disgression, quite far from lead in chinese flutes
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Re: Lead content in Chinese Flutes???
01:14 on Saturday, October 24, 2009
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