a tie...and check out the overwhelming interest...

1:1
Oh well.
Here's the thing:
It took me about
25 minutes to completely unwhack all of that denting, but (sadly for me) it took an
additional 40 minutes
to
- pull the main and #1 body-mounted slide assemblies back to where they belong (BOTH so as the slides would slide in nicely AND so as the #1 piston would - once again - move up-and-down freely). Once that mess was unraveled, there was all the mickey-mouse crap:
- new valve felts (so as the pistons didn't supply a percussion section)
- replacing a too-worn-back-to-catch-in-the-slot #2 guide with a new one (with the new one having its steel sandwich too long past the plastic and dragging in the casing slot...so a few moments of messing around with that)
- removing the broken water key (which some strong-thumbed dolt had broken BECAUSE it was rusted to the hinge screw, which I had to break free WITHOUT breaking the screw)...and then FINDING a replacement Yamaha water key, and then (actually) replacing it
- corks on the water keys
- I also found that I had to braze a crack shut in the #1 slide bow, and also (using the #3 slide as a lever) pull up the #2 slide outside slide tubes - which had been mushed into the #1 casing knuckles.
I may have charged a good bit for that hour, but the hour wasn't all of it. I also had to
- go get it
- load, unload
- type up a quote, and email the PDF
- load, unload, deliver
- wait a long time for the damn money
(The quote won't even be approved until sometime this week, but - if I waited for all of these quotes to be approved - NONE of these schools would have their crap un-destroyed in time for their mid-July band camps.)
I'm sure I charged less than NYC or other yankee-cities prices.
Maybe (??) an hour or so wasn't so bad, but (consider these other bullet points) I'm glad I didn't charge any less.
At least, there was no lead soldering involved in all this mess.