With steady playing, a harmonica should go at least 6 months before a reed goes bad. Modern harmonicas seem to last much longer than the older ones. The next step is a harmonica repair kit. Here I'll hand over to the experts.
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Read More »Try pushing the reed out half a dozen times, then playing it. Any better? If not, then repeat. And repeat… Another common problem is a reed which suddenly goes way out of tune. Bad news here. The reed has cracked at the base, and either it, or the harmonica needs to be replaced. Most go for the latter. With steady playing, a harmonica should go at least 6 months before a reed goes bad. Modern harmonicas seem to last much longer than the older ones. The next step is a harmonica repair kit. Here I’ll hand over to the experts. Tombo (Lee Oskar) have long had a basic harmonica toolkit, Seydel now have a comprehensive range, available on their site. Harmonica customiser Richard Sleigh has a good toolkit, available on his site. Hohner have taken big steps forward in recent years, with a complete range of harmonica toolsets and parts. Better still, they have an excellent series of maintenance videos, showing how to set reed gaps, tune reeds and replace broken ones. The videos are here. So. Next time some lazy money heads your way, buy a harmonica toolkit. Then get an old harmonica, watch the Hohner videos, then try setting the reed gaps, using the proper tools. Correct gapping greatly improves harmonica performance. A final maintenance topic, mentioned in passing only (I’m out of words), is reed tuning. Fairly straightforward. Filing/scraping metal from the top of a reed raises the pitch, removing metal from the bottom of the reed lowers the pitch. Again, watch the videos, use the right tools, practice on an old harmonica. Basic harmonica maintenance is just that. The skills and tools to keep your instruments running are now easily had. Get them, practice a little, then thank me down the track.
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