| Flute
Care - Sticky Pads!
Sticky
pads can be infuriating. However, they are something that
nearly all flute players have to put up with to some extent.
Very few flutes have no stickiness at all, and to be honest,
there is not that much that you can do about it!!
Most
pads are made up of the following parts :-
- A
card washer to give the pad some stiffness.
- A
felt washer (usually about 2mm thick) that sits on top of
the card washer.
- Two
layers of 'Gold Beater's Skin' which is stretched tightly
over the felt washer and glued on to the underside of the
card washer holding everything together and providing an
airtight surface that will seal the tone hole.
When a pad becomes sticky all that has happened is that
the surface of the skin has become dirty which causes slight
holding of the skin when the pad comes off the top of the
tone hole, when it releases, it makes the characteristic
sticky noise.
The
dirt usually gets on to the pad when the pad is damp. Dust
in the air, or in the flute case, settles on the skin and
it gradually 'becomes slightly sticky'.
Another cause is players eating sweets, or sweet drinks, before
they play the flute. Stickiness seems to follow soon afterwards!
To prevent this clean your teeth, or at least have a drink
of water before playing after eating sweet things.
Probably the best way to clean the surface of a pad relatively
safely is to use lighter fluid on a cigarette paper. Proceed
as follows (under parental supervision, please) :-
- Buy
a can of 'Lighter Fluid' from any good newsagent. (Make
sure you buy fluid, not gas) and also some cigarette papers.
- Put
two drips on to a cigarette paper and slide this between
the sticky pad and the tone hole. Close the pad on to it
and gently hold it closed for about 10 seconds. Open the
key and then close it again with the paper in a slightly
different position. Take the paper out, blow on it to evaporate
the remaining lighter fluid, and replace it between pad
and tone hole and close the key for the last time on to
the paper to blot up any remaining fluid.
Hopefully, you will now find the pad is not sticking, or
at least the noise is reduced.
- Repeat
with the next pad.
N.B.
At no time pull the paper out from under the pad when the
key is closed (see note 3 following).
A
Few Words of Warning!
The following methods for stopping sticky pads are sometimes
recommended. (My feeling is that the above method is the safest).
They are :-
- 'Put
talcum powder on to a cigarette paper and close this between
pad and tone hole. The talc will stick to the sticky parts
of the skin reducing the stickiness'. (Whilst this does
reduce stickiness I feel that adding more 'mess' on to the
skin surface is asking for trouble later on. Also, I'm sure
the pad cannot seal as well after this treatment).
- 'Wipe
a soft pencil on to a cigarette paper and then close this
between pad and tone hole'. (As with method 1 above, this
is adding more and more mess to the pad surface. I cannot
recommend it).
- 'Place
a dry cigarette paper between pad and tone hole, close the
key and pull the cigarette paper out'. DON'T DO THIS. It
ruins the pads very quickly. Paper is surprisingly rough
and acts like sandpaper on the pad skin. When this has been
done only a few times the surface of the skin looks frayed.
This pad will not last long and will certainly not seal
as well.
I
hope the above helps with your sticky pad problems. Do remember
though, even if using the lighter fluid method, that you should
only do this occasionally.
Written
by Ian McLauchlan, originally published in Flutewise Magazine
issue 46.
|