Elkhart 88H water key

Post Reply
justatrombonist
Posts: 17
Joined: Fri Feb 14, 2025 5:46 pm

Elkhart 88H water key

Post by justatrombonist »

I have recently notice that my water key cork does not cover the hole at the bottom of the slide entirely, do I need a new cork, or is it out of alignment.
User avatar
UATrombone
Posts: 126
Joined: Sun Sep 15, 2024 12:10 pm

Re: Elkhart 88H water key

Post by UATrombone »

It could be both...
Nobody can tell you without photos, I think.
timothy42b
Posts: 1799
Joined: Tue Mar 27, 2018 5:51 am

Re: Elkhart 88H water key

Post by timothy42b »

Yesterday I took a older King in to repair with the same problem, a cup that doesn't align perfectly with the nipple (apologies for wrong technical terms?) and a pad that needs changing.

The tech said no way he could bend the key without risking breaking it, but he could put a new pad on that would seal. Charged me $2.12 USD.

I guess I could order a new key that might fit. And then when I go to change it the spring will fly across the room and be lost forever, and I'll order a new spring. By the time it comes I'll have forgotten where I put the key. Maybe I'll just live with watching the pad closely and changing when it stops sealing.

Anyway, I suspect that cups that don't meet the nipple squarely are fairly common.
Blabberbucket
Posts: 249
Joined: Sun Oct 09, 2022 5:03 pm

Re: Elkhart 88H water key

Post by Blabberbucket »

A scrap piece of sheet brass to protect the waterkey from marring, and a pair or two of quality parallel jaw pliers can fix the majority of waterkey issues. Unless, of course, it was installed incorrectly.

Proceed at your own risk.
David Paul - Brass Repair/Manufacture, O'Malley Brass (Chicago)
User avatar
BGuttman
Posts: 7082
Joined: Thu Mar 22, 2018 7:19 am

Re: Elkhart 88H water key

Post by BGuttman »

timothy42b wrote: Wed Feb 26, 2025 5:49 am ...

The tech said no way he could bend the key without risking breaking it, but he could put a new pad on that would seal. Charged me $2.12 USD.

I guess I could order a new key that might fit. And then when I go to change it the spring will fly across the room and be lost forever, and I'll order a new spring. By the time it comes I'll have forgotten where I put the key. Maybe I'll just live with watching the pad closely and changing when it stops sealing.

Anyway, I suspect that cups that don't meet the nipple squarely are fairly common.
All it takes is a light bump to cause that misalignment. The water key is sometimes made of soft metal and bends easily.
Bruce Guttman
Merrimack Valley Philharmonic Orchestra
"Almost Professional"
Post Reply

Return to “Instruments”