There's a lot about a lot of new instruments that's crappy, including domestic-made and band director default brand ones. I just sent off a pair of consecutively numbered #1 short action pistons - which were oval at the top - for rebuilding. The instruments were bought new this year . You could tell me that those pistons were dropped by students, but I could also tell you what the manufacturer did - prior to sale - to try to make them go up and down. There are dumb routines I have to go through with super-expensive Asian-made marching instruments that I just never have to do with older domestic-made marching instruments.
I have told people on this discussion site that - if they buy a (particular) instrument that is shown here for sale - and they live somewhere near me, that I'd be willing to work on it, but that's usually been because it looked interesting to me. I don't really advertise for work, but I really try to not turn down work. I hope no one misinterprets the stuff that I post in the repair form as advertising. People seem to really like to look at crap like that, so I take a picture or two. I just don't have time to make movies or take a bunch of before and after pictures, but if I think about it I might snap one or two during pictures or maybe one ready-to-call-the-customer picture. That having been said, don't mistake that last sentence for me not needing work. Everyone needs to work - particularly these days, when all the money that we thought we had is now worth about 40% of what it was previously worth, but I seem to have a pretty good steady stream of things to do, and if I said yes to more people, would be overwhelmed.
My company's Facebook page has - as the background picture - a stack of a baritone sax (I can't remember whether it's a Selmer or some domestic one...??) supported by a tapered piece of wood held in a vise, but there's absolutely nothing on the page about repair work other than that. Further, there's no way that I would ever publish some repair charge list Mostly what we do is repairs, but we are certainly not an "overhaul mill". Everything else on that page is about instruments for sale. When somebody buys a early and particularly crappy Jimbo trombone for 40 bucks at a pawn shop - and they really look like they don't have much money (usually based on if their car is as crappy as mine) and they're trying to get something for their kid to play in beginner band, I can make those slides go up and down ...and I can make their tuning slides move...and I can straighten them back out...so why should I tilt my head back and look down my nose at them (giving them the music store snob routine, etc.) When I can - nearly as easily - spend 45 minutes, charge them $45, and they've got something that their little kid can make a noise with and keep up in class with, until the kid - just as with kids with brand new Chinese-made name brand-beginner trombones that cost 1200 bucks ($100/mo.) - tears it up again? And yes, there are times when such instruments were so torn up that I can only make them work sort of okay. Those are the times when I repair them for nothing, but ask those - for whom I did those favors - to not tell anyone who got their instrument working for them. (ie. "Ol' bloke must be losing his touch", etc.)
"Walmart instruments don't 'hold up'."
They sure as hell won't, if you treat them like that.
Yeah.. pad bugs. I either sell someone a clean used or really cheap molded Chinese case, or just hand them their instrument and their case separately and let them decide what to do. Sometimes, they might even ask me if I have a nicer new case to sell them. Sure. When someone has a particularly nice case and their instrument had bad bugs, those cases are worth cleaning out. For those people, I might give them an unsellable but functional clarinet case - that has no bugs in it - to use for a while until they are sure that they're really nice case is free of bugs and larvae. Really old clarinets that haven't been played in a long time that were eaten up with pad bugs ... there's usually nothing alive in either those instruments or those cases.