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Originally Posted by frabarmus
Anyway, I tried to find out if I could repair that first crack but got no reply from the company. I suppose I could have tried any number of glue concepts to try to heal it over but I wound up just patching it up with Gorilla Tape. Many, many tours later I am still using the same case. Every time it gets a little crack or a giant shark bite I just bust out the trusty Gorilla Tape or duct tape and go at it. Something about the surface of the Hiscox case makes it so that stickers and many kinds of tape will not adhere to it very well. So I just have to re-do old tape jobs every now and then because the tape can become a bit loose over time.
At some point I'll have a sense that the case should be replaced but it still seems as fundamentally solid as ever. I highly recommend them to anyone. I just wish they were a bit easier to obtain in the US since I understand that they no longer have a distributer here.
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06-23-2024 07:41 AM
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Not really surprising that a case manufacturer isn't too forthcoming with repair tips for damage that they probably consider lethal. If you care enough about the contents of the cage you should probably treat it like a motorcycle helmet: replace after an accident.
Originally Posted by gggguitar
As a teenager I used to help out a Spanish beacher (?) my family had befriended, and watched him repair his pedalos and other "plastic" fun gear that was exposed to a lot of abuse and probably fragilised by the combination of sun/UV and salt water. He'd apply a layer of clear epoxy or something similar, than work fibreglass mats into the goo, and some more, add another mat in a different orientation, let it dry and go at it some more. I now apply that same technique on a much small scale to repair seriously split nailsbut it should work for hard cases too. It'll have the big advantage over any kind of strong sticky tape that it won't melt off in the heat leaving residue that must be very hard to get off.
As an alternative to fibre mats you could use a single thin sheet of aluminum. I used 4 to turn a BAM 2-violin case I used to have into something just a bit heavier but more protective against puncture damage.
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Thanks @gggguitar for the good info and photos.
Thanks @RJVB for the repairing tips.
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Wouldn't the cost of an 11 hour drive be comparable to an extra plane ticket for the guitar? The only reliable method these days unfortunately. These tickets are exempt from some taxes and are usually cheaper.
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I just returned from Japan (aka guitar shopping heaven) with a new archtop that had to be gate checked. The United employee at the baggage check-in counter shrink-wrapped the case with about 20 layers and assured me the hold stays well above freezing. The plane, a new 787, had pretty small overheads and no way that big instrument would have fit. Fortunately this was a direct flight for me so the guitar did not have to endure numerous transfers.
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As others have pointed out there is no guaranteed way to protect your instrument aside from buying a seat, which I have done before when I brought my Super 400 to Beijing where I live.
Years back when I used to tour with John Jorgenson's Quintet we were on the road at least once a month and I always had my guitar in a Calton case and have NEVER had any issue. So if you're willing to shell out the $$, a Calton is an excellent choice. I have been bringing guitars back and forth on international flights for years and so far have never had any issues with damage when I'm using a Calton.
Short of a Calton case or buying a seat, you unfortunately never know who you will encounter at check-in so it really comes down to luck if the airline staff is willing to accommodate you or not. Most of the time it will be ok, but we all know now and then disaster can happen.
If I am bringing my guitar, it will be in a Calton, I try to carry it on but if I can't, I'll gate check, and lastly I try to only fly direct when I have a guitar to minimize the amount of handling it will endure.
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Ciari Guitars Pro-Play Folding Guitar
My new Ciari (P90 Solo) arrived last week. Best engineered guitar I've ever had. Now working on getting good amplified tone out of it with super-compact rig
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RJ VB:
"If you care enough about the contents of the cage you should probably treat it like a motorcycle helmet: replace after an accident."
Donnd:
"I just returned from Japan (aka guitar shopping heaven) with a new archtop that had to be gate checked. The United employee at the baggage check-in counter shrink-wrapped the case with about 20 layers and assured me the hold stays well above freezing. The plane, a new 787, had pretty small overheads and no way that big instrument would have fit. Fortunately this was a direct flight for me so the guitar did not have to endure numerous transfers."
THESE OBSERVATIONS ARE REALLY PRACTICAL
Traveling with your irreplaceable instrument has to be as impenetrably packaged as if you were shipping it!
Raney and Aebersold - Great Interview (1986)
Yesterday, 11:21 PM in Improvisation