Forum Activity for @zeeaviatrix

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
02/21/20 08:43:14AM
13 posts

Airline Travel With a Dulcimer


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Garret:

I went abroad to France on some business in fall of 2017 and brought along my McSpadden in a soft case.  I'm not sure about what the luggage allowance difference is between international and domestic flights but I was able to find under "musical instruments" the size limitations and discovered I could bring my McSpadden with soft case as a carry-on.  It fit into the overhead bin on top of other people's luggage.  I was nervous about it, I must say, but it traveled fine.  I would prefer doing what Aaron does next time.  Anyway, it was possible in 2017 to bring it onboard an international flight at least. 

Thank you Garret. From what I am reading it appears that you can bring your dulcimer on the airplane as carry-on, as long as it fits in the overhead bin.  The problem is I am booked on a CRJ200 going from Huntsville, AL to Washington DC and bins measure 18" wide!  Ridiculous.  So unless, the crew is willing to put it in one of their personal lockers which would be bigger and longer, I don't think they're going to let me take it.  Such a shame...

 

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
02/21/20 08:09:38AM
13 posts

Airline Travel With a Dulcimer


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Ken Hulme:

OK -- here's a photo of my sono-tube cardboard dulcimer case with the jig for my Holly Leaf dulcimer next to it, for scale.  Just a tub, two 1/2" plywood disks for top & bottom, some duct tape and a piece of nylon strapping for a handle. This carries 2 dulcimers, one of which is 39" from end-to-end.  I roll them up together in small-bubble bubble-wrap until I get a squeeze fit, then tape on the ends.  Have used this technique to ship dulcimers all over the place@

Pardon the messy workshop/garage...

 

Thank you, Ken, that is a very clever set up!  

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
02/20/20 04:03:44PM
13 posts

Airline Travel With a Dulcimer


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Dusty Turtle:

Here's a link to a similar discussion from about 7 years ago.  In that discussion I link to an article about the law requiring airlines to accommodate instruments in the overhead.


I can't remember if I mentioned this in that discussion, but Aaron O'Rourke shared with me a few years ago that when he travels by air he packs his dulcimers in a soft gig bag surrounded by his clothes and towels and stuffed in one of those hard, oversized containers made for carrying golf clubs, which he checks as luggage.  The dulcimers are safe inside and the airlines are used to handling those things.  Then he also has a light, soft case when he gets to his destination.


Also pay attention to this discussion in which Jan Potts warns us that some airlines don't let economy passengers use the overhead spaces at all. They are closed before you even board.


I have taken small dulcimers as carry-ons. I have an octave dulcimer that can fit under the seat in front and a ginger-sized dulcimer that I put in a hard viola case in the overhead. I've never traveled by air with a full-sized dulcimer, but presumably if it can fit in the overhead, you can take it.


And to put the proper amount of fear in you, here's Bing's song about Northwest Airlines mangling his dulcimer .



That's a lot of great information!  After further thought, I'm thinking there's no way they're going to let me take it with me - the dulcimer would not fit in a CRJ200 overhead bin. And putting it under the seats in front of me, would obviously annoy a person sitting next to me if they can't stretch their legs.  I'm 5'1", so no problem for me, but with my luck, I would probably end up with a guy measuring 6'6"! 


 

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
02/20/20 03:33:29PM
13 posts

Airline Travel With a Dulcimer


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Ken Hulme:

It's not TSA you have to worry about, it's the particular airline.  Last year, flying from Florida to Kentucky for the Berea Traditional Dulcemore Gathering, Allegiant made me check my handmade case because they said "it didn't look like a musical instrument case", and there was no recourse but to put it in the belly of the beast.  On the way home on American, they let me have the same case in the cabin where the crew keep their goodies.  

BTW, the case was a 40" length of 8" diameter, 1/2" thick hard cardboard "sonotube" used as a form for casting concrete pilings.

Thanks, Ken!  After further research, I see I am booked on a CRJ200 which is a ridiculously small jet with overhead bins that won't even take a small suitcase with rollers (from what I am reading in different forums.)  I'm wondering if they would let me put it under my seat, although it would obviously go between my seat and the seat in front of me.  Also, my case is a soft case.  I guess I better invest in or borrow a hard case in case they tell me it has to go in the bagage compartment.  Do you have a picture of your case?  Sounds interesting...

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
02/20/20 03:11:42PM
13 posts

Airline Travel With a Dulcimer


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Thank you so much, Dusty!  I can't imagine being without my dulcimer for 6 days!

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
02/20/20 09:25:35AM
13 posts

Airline Travel With a Dulcimer


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions


Hello, Everyone,

I was wondering if anyone has had any experience traveling on a commercial flight with a mountain dulcimer.  I'd like to take it with me onboard as a carry-on but if I understand correctly, TSA allows a maximum 45" dimensions.  I've got a McSpadden soft case 36" X 10" (at the widest point) X 3" which would put me 4" above the limit.  I was wondering how strict TSA is about this.  I would hate to "check it in" as I am sure that 800lb gorilla they keep in the back will smash it to pieces, God forbid!

Any thoughts on this would be greatly appreciated, especially from those of you who have experience with it.  Many thanks!

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
01/31/20 11:08:41PM
13 posts

Problem With Buzzing Base String


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

Robin Thompson:

I'm happy your bass string buzz was remedied!  

Thank you, Robin!  I appreciate it!

 

 

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
01/31/20 05:09:33PM
13 posts

Problem With Buzzing Base String


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

 was looking at all the different topics and ran across this topic I started 9 months ago.  Sorry, folks, I neglected to tell you the end of the story.  I finally decided to send my dulcimer back to McSpadden which they repaired in 3 days and sent it back expedited shipping at no cost to me.  Totally awesome!  The problem was, as I had suspected, the first fret which needed some adjustment.  The vibrating string was hitting the fret causing the buzzing sound and by lowering the fret just a hair, the problem was terminated.  Happy ending, my dulcimer sounds wonderful once again!

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
05/16/19 11:20:56PM
13 posts

Problem With Buzzing Base String


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

 

[/quote]

That can sometimes be attributed to a string that is not tight enough for the note it's being tuned to. With a slightly too slack string, your finger pushes the string right down to the wood much more easily, bending/pulling it to sound a bit sharp.  Also a slightly slack string will much more likely hit the frets when it's vibrating.  Again, for both these issues, I suggest you put on a wound bass string that is not so thin as your current .022.    Try a .024 wound.

[/quote

I see.  I will definitely try that.  Hope it works and will let you know! 

 

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
05/16/19 10:59:23PM
13 posts

Problem With Buzzing Base String


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

@ Kusani

Thanks, what's weird is that the string is in tune when played open, but sharpens when you use the frets.  That doesn't make sense to me.

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
05/16/19 10:53:57PM
13 posts

Problem With Buzzing Base String


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

[quote="Strumelia"]

"I suggest you try a new bass string, and try one that is just one size thicker-  like a wound .23 or .24 instead of your .22 . That will increase the tension a bit so it won't buzz against any frets while vibrating. 
Also, the windings on an old string may have flattened out a bit at the nut or bridge area, slowly lowering the string by just enough to start creating buzzes.... a new string would solve that as well.  

Wound bass strings tend to be the first string to age and start sounding 'dead' anyway- so it's a good thing to replace the wound thick string on your instrument if it's getting old."

Thank you, Strumelia!  I will try that as well.  The strings are new since last August but I really don't know how long strings are supposed to last.  I play every day for a good 30-60 minutes, so they're getting a pretty good workout.

 

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
05/16/19 10:48:05PM
13 posts

Problem With Buzzing Base String


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

[quote="Skip"]

I suggest  you check the string height first. Try sliding a dime under the strings right next to the 1st fret. It will probably drag or not fit if the slot in the nut has worn a bit. Call the Dulcimer Shop for advice and order another nut also. The bridge should also be checked by sliding a nickel on top of the 7th fret. 

 

Thank you, Skip!  The nickel fit, the dime did not.  I definitely think the strings are too close to the 1st fret and some adjustment will need to be made.  The string is definitely buzzing off the 1st fret.  Thanks for the tip!

 

ZeeAviatrix
@zeeaviatrix
05/16/19 08:35:08PM
13 posts

Problem With Buzzing Base String


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions


Hello,

I bought a custom McSpadden dulcimer about one year ago, after deciding to learn how to play, and I have really enjoyed it.  It has a wonderful, mellow sound and has been a pleasure to play … until now.  Within the last few days, my base string has started buzzing in an annoying way.  It looks to me like the vibrating string is hitting the first fret.  (It might be my imagination but I believe the melody string is starting to sympathetically buzz as well, as of today.)

I have read every Forum Discussion on buzzing strings on this site.  Someone suggested using a toothpick to raise the string slightly.  Well, when I did that, the buzzing stopped but every note down the string was off key (slightly sharp), which doesn't make a lot of sense to me since the adjustment is right up to the nut. The base string is original and is a wrapped .22 string.  I read where someone said a newer string might buzz more than an older string in one of the forums, so I don't think the age of the string is a factor.

I play my dulcimer every single day and I am wondering if I have already worn something out!  Is it possible for a nut or the grooves in the nut to deepen?  I feel nervous about having someone work on it because I am wondering how they are going to fix it without messing it up.  

Any thoughts or suggestions would be greatly appreciated since I am fairly new to the dulcimer world.

Many thanks!