By the time (as a beginner student) my friend received it, it was all smushed up, but he was proud to have it, as no one else in his school owned their own French horn.
He wants to donate it to a beginner or to a school, so he asked me to fix it up. I refused to run up his bill higher than $300, as doing more worth than that could have easily (even with all of this inflation, but due to so many people turning up their noses at perfectly good F horns) outrun it's monetary value.
Also, the valves rate a B+, so (again) I agreed to do this...
...so this should demonstrate that they rotors are viable enough for the instrument to be of use:
5-second video with sound: https://i.imgur.com/ZJnLiXk.mp4
I unsmushed it, re-soldered (I'm thinking...) six solder joints, and acid-cleaned it (FULL of lime, and the lime - surely - accounts for the rotor/casing wear down to "B+"), along with repairing the mouthpipe tube - which was nearly cracked in half about 1/4-inch past the 4-inch-long receiver/overpart.
Here's the repaired mouthpipe tube (with the arrow showing where it was formerly damaged:
![Image](https://i.imgur.com/5COmbfB.jpeg)
...so how do you suppose I repaired it?
- no patching
- no silver brazing
- same mouthpipe