I am making my first horn howlers and am looking for any advice or tips a few of you eperienced guys could give. I am just about finished with the buffing and am starting on the tone board later today, the horn is not cut off on the tip yet or drilled.
Thanks Jeremy
I went to the tutorial page and it said I neede 10 posts to view and I had 9 so here is 10!
Sorry bout that Joel.
I was in the back dinkin with that the other day and forgot to put it back on 10.
Try it now.
Whos Joel? :confused:
Quote from: FinsnFur on April 04, 2007, 01:22:42 PM
Sorry bout that Joel.
I was in the back dinkin
I think he is still drinkin.
Jeremy, Are you going with a separate tone board or are you making a one piece howler?
im workin on a delrin tone board now, man this is hard.
Aint he your neighbor? :wo: Who is this?? :sad:
He who? What neighbor? Man am I confused now!!
If you go to my web site, there is a tutorial on making tone boards. THe hardest part is getting the arch right so that there are no bumps or flat spots. In the tutorial I show you how to use a contour gauge to copy a tone board from another call. That gets you started. You can tune your tone board from there.
A good starting point is to make your air channel 3/16" wide and about 1/4" deep. You can work from there, but that should get you in the ball park.
Remember that your reed can have a huge effect on the perormance of your call too.
Try to take the reed, and bend it under itself so it looks like this
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Bending it under lifts the reed just slighly off the "reed bridge" (flat part where the reed sits) and allows it to bend more naturally when you blow it. This will even out the tone somewhat and eliminate any tiny pitch breaks.
If you are trying to sand a profile of your tone board on the delrin, use a silver sharpie pen to mark the line you want to sand to. It is much easier.
The closer you get to where you think it should be, start sanding on one direction only, not back and forth. Sand from the base of the reed bridge to the tip in even strokes. This helps eliminate any flat spots or bumps too.
Making your first tone boards can be frustrating,but when you get one to work the way you want it, it is all worth the trouble. Like anything else, it gets easier wth practice so keep at it You will get it.
Let me know if I can help you
Al
THO Game Calls
www.thogamecalls.com
Thank you Al.
Quote from: FinsnFur on April 04, 2007, 02:35:33 PM
Aint he your neighbor? :wo: Who is this?? :sad:
:roflmao: :roflmao: :roflmao: :roflmao: :roflmao: :roflmao:
Jimbo........are you confusing Newbomb with Newdog? :wo: