I prefer my phonos like me, not at all polished, a little bit dull but occasionally well oiled.

I'm trying to think of a way I can get you to "hand polish" some of my horns or even just dust them. That would sure make my Wife happy...phonogfp wrote:Here's a horn I polished by hand 5 years ago. It looks shinier in the photo than it does in real life. When it was freshly polished, I could have shaved in my reflection. Now I couldn't even recognize myself!
George P.
Scott, should I tell the truth and just blame it on just being lazy???.....MTPhono wrote:I'm with George on this topic. If the machine is near mint, the horn should be too. I love shiny brass and nickle horns - they are beautiful and the way they were sold and meant to look. For the first several years I am certain the original owners would have attempted to keep the horns looking new. I don't understand the need to retain oxidation!
Wayne, why wouldn't you clean the nickle horn? What is the value in not cleaning it? I wouldn't touch the brass horn either - it looks awesome.
Now that is a patina I love!Here's a horn I polished by hand 5 years ago. It looks shinier in the photo than it does in real life. When it was freshly polished, I could have shaved in my reflection. Now I couldn't even recognize myself!
George P.
i am from europe and yes they can be nasty for quite some years you can get repro's of aluminium horns and these are worse they have a very rough finish and they are not shiny like the original onesMTPhono wrote:That makes complete sense. I think I am basing my experience more on European aluminum horns than nickeled horns. Nearly every aluminum horn I get is pitted and nasty. most need to have dents removed too so I almost always polish them at that point. The difference is amazing.