Forum logo Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
May 19, 2024, 05:08:29 AM
Home | Help | Login | Register Planet Bluegrass | Facebook | Twitter | Shop
News: This is the "archived" version of the old Festivarian Forum.  To create new posts, visit Festivarian.com

NavTree open  Festivarian Forum
NavTree sideNavTree open  The Shed
NavTree downNavTree sideNavTree open  Mandolin (Moderator: BluegrassNat)
NavTree downNavTree downNavTree sideNavTree open  Do you hydrate your mandolin?
« previous next »
Pages: [1] 2 Go Down Print
topic icon Author Topic: Do you hydrate your mandolin?  (Read 55838 times)
BluegrassBrian
Administrator
Forumvarian
*****

Festivation rating 420
Offline Offline

Posts: 549


It's mandological


WWW
URL icon « on: February 05, 2007, 02:44:21 PM »

Okay, I'll try out a little mando-geek posting...

I pulled my mandolin out of the case yesterday for the first time in over a month.  Usually I keep a little humidifier in the mandolin, but that had long since dried up.  So I was nervous about how it was going to play.  But amazingly, it sounded and played great.

Do others (particularly in CO) hydrate their mandolins?  My mando (a Collings) was born in TX and lived for awhile in North Carolina, so I always figured it needed lots of moisture here in Colorado. 

Am I wasting my time with the hydration/humidifier?  Or causing more damage?   Curious to hear other's thoughts...

Now Playing icon Listening to: Stephen Kellogg & the Sixers
IP address Logged

Somewhere there's rock under the blue grass...
SteamboatPaul
Forumvarian
*****

Festivation rating 10
Offline Offline

Posts: 262


Woof!


URL icon « Reply #1 on: February 06, 2007, 02:53:35 PM »

My mando and my mandols were born a few feet from you and i have never hydrated them. They both seem to be fine.

oooo  Collins....drool drool


Now Playing icon Listening to: Tom Waits - Orphans- Bastards
IP address Logged

"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."   
    Ben Franklin, 1759
Bud
Newbie
*

Festivation rating 1
Offline Offline

Posts: 14



URL icon « Reply #2 on: February 08, 2007, 09:47:28 AM »

I've never hydrated my mandolin, but I do try to keep a humidifier running in the house during the winter.  Not sure how much actually gets to my music room, into the case, directly to the mandolin.  I've seen no problems with my instruments here in NC.

Now Playing icon Listening to: Carrie Hassler and Hard Rain
IP address Logged
BluegrassBrian
Administrator
Forumvarian
*****

Festivation rating 420
Offline Offline

Posts: 549


It's mandological


WWW
URL icon « Reply #3 on: February 12, 2007, 10:24:04 AM »

I suppose I should just let it settle into the dryness of Colorado and never worry about this.

But here's another question:  I've been leaving my mando out of its case (and actually playing it for a change) and I've noticed that the top is dropping a little bit - presumably due to the lack of my intense hydration.  (for whatever that was worth)

Is it a waste of time for me to put my little humidifer in the f-holes but leave the instrument out of the case?  I always assumed I had to put it in a closed case to really change the humidity level.  I'm still sort of guessing that's true.  Rolleyes
IP address Logged

Somewhere there's rock under the blue grass...
BluegrassDustin
Administrator
...is kind of a big deal
*****

Festivation rating 420
Offline Offline

Posts: 1518


Living Life With Delusions Of Banjur


URL icon « Reply #4 on: February 12, 2007, 11:06:48 AM »



as you know, I'm no expert in the ways of instruments...but here's my thought:

perhaps due to your intense hydration, the sudden lack of any moisture at all has taken a slight affect on the mando.

perhaps you can wean the mando off its humidty addicition with some methadone or other similar intrument helping drug. LOL

(yes, I'm a dork who seeks only to entertain himself. Geek)
IP address Logged

"Be who you are and say what you feel, because those
who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind."- Dr. Seuss

"An intellectual snob is someone who can listen to the William Tell Overture and not think of The Lone Ranger."   -Dan Rather
fatcactus
Newbie
*

Festivation rating 0
Offline Offline

Posts: 2



URL icon « Reply #5 on: February 18, 2007, 01:03:06 AM »

I have a San Juan mandolin made by Bobby Wintringham. I live in Colorado (where it's ussually pretty dry)  but sometimes visit my family in Ohio (where it's not so dry at times) & of course I take my mandolin, so I asked him about hydrating & the effects of traveling from a dry climate to a humid, & he said don't worry about it. So I don't. I even took it to Lima Peru in the summer (where it's pretty humid) & had no problems.

However, I do notice that my mando sounds different as the humidity changes, with it sounding the best around 40%.

Now Playing icon Listening to: The voices in my head
« Last Edit: February 18, 2007, 11:00:06 PM by fatcactus » IP address Logged
Prospector
Newbie
*

Festivation rating 3
Offline Offline

Posts: 13


I Harley to the Music


URL icon « Reply #6 on: February 25, 2007, 06:23:11 AM »

I am not a musician, but a lover of wood. I am a sales representative for a major cabinet manufacturer. Our number one service call is related to improper humidity in the home. Wood is kiln dried to 6 - 8% moisture content. This keeps the wood very stable. In order to maintain 6-8% moisture content in the wood the surrounding relative humidity must be in the neighborhood of 45 - 60 %.
Wood is porous and will react to it's surrounding conditions. If you have no humidity system in your home, run the furnace/wood burning stove 5 months out of the year, your home is going to be down in the 30's and your instrument is going to be 4.6 - 4.8, very dry, wood contracted.
On the other end, if you live in a river bottom, leave the garage door up all the time, and the windows down, you are going to have excessive humidity and your instrument will go up to as high as 12-15 % and the material will expand.
Solid woods respond quicker and move more than veneers.

It doesn't really matter too much about which state you live in, it matters more about what is going on inside the home where the instrument is stored.

Hope this helps a little.

Prospector
IP address Logged
david blair
Small Member
**

Festivation rating 17
Offline Offline

Posts: 54


URL icon « Reply #7 on: February 26, 2007, 02:54:41 AM »

If the top on your mandolin is sinking you should definetely humidify your environment or at the very least always return it to the case. A large sponge inside a zip-loc bag with holes in it is a good idea. A Martin dealer recomended a friend put his new guitar first in a plastic trash bag with the humidifier and then into the case for the first month or two. As a general rule good musical instruments are not made from kiln dried wood, but stock which has been seasoning for many years in the luthiers shop. San Juan mandolins are made in Ouray, just over the hill from Telluride, and his wood is already acclimated to the dryness. Give yours time to season before stopping or slowing your hydrating is my two cents. I have many vintage and new instruments in my house, and have luckily hydronic heat, but when I recently took home a new high end mandolin from the SF bay area to Tahoe the top split a couple days later. Change in tempurature can also be an issue with a new instrument. Besides the wood cracking it can also cause lacquer to check. Camping? A heater at night and your sleeping bag during the day to store your precious.
« Last Edit: February 26, 2007, 03:01:37 AM by david blair » IP address Logged
adk pete
Newbie
*

Festivation rating 0
Offline Offline

Posts: 4


URL icon « Reply #8 on: March 10, 2007, 06:27:04 AM »

 i have both a solid wood morgan monroe mando (cheap but what a great playing instrument) also a mahogany gallagher guitar in addition to keyboards, strats, and various and sundry other acoustic and electronic instruments. i live in the adk mountains of extreme upstate ny...about as close to quebec you can get w/out speakng french... we heat w/ wood, which draws the moisture out of everything around.  i keep a humidifier in both cases...and check them regularly... we also keep a small humidifier going in the house all during heating season.  my "in case" humidifiers need to be recharged at least once a week.  they actually go dry.  w/ the money invested...its a small price to pay...  an old fashioned film vial w/ a bunch of holes punched in it along w/ a piece of dampened sponge costs about nothing is is cheap insurance.  i do know many pickers around here who ignore humidity and have warped and cracked instruments to show for it...enough prostelitizing...hope all is well and keep on picking

Now Playing icon Listening to: march wood cracklin' in the stove
IP address Logged
Pen
Festivarian
****

Festivation rating 420
Offline Offline

Posts: 164



WWW
URL icon « Reply #9 on: June 08, 2007, 11:06:36 AM »

I live in Denver and occasionally see the humidity drop to concerning lvl's.  I have a room full of mando, guitars and dulcimers (all accoustic).  The rule of thumb I follow has been to keep my lvl's between 40-60% humidity.  I have a cheepo humidity gauge in that room and an inexpensive room humidifier there.  If it dips - I turn it on.  I don't normally have to worry about it in the summer it seems - winters are more of a concern.

Waiting until you have instrument damage is too late.  You know the saying about an ounce of prevention.........

IP address Logged

"How many of you folks have seen that movie "O Brother, Where Ya At?"--Ralph Stanley
david blair
Small Member
**

Festivation rating 17
Offline Offline

Posts: 54


URL icon « Reply #10 on: June 15, 2007, 03:31:08 AM »

I heard the saying once that a chopped up raw potato in your case will get you from Nashville to Aspen...

Travel safe all. I heard a few years ago of Colorado patrol pulling over a car cause of something hanging from the mirror. And they searched!
IP address Logged
linda baker
Small Member
**

Festivation rating 8
Offline Offline

Posts: 83


URL icon « Reply #11 on: October 15, 2007, 07:19:30 AM »

How about borrowing/renting a beater mando or something from a music shop. that we you MIL could hear the music. My 10 yo has a spare one here I bet he'd lend here in DOlores in exchange for it's return.

Linda
IP address Logged
linda baker
Small Member
**

Festivation rating 8
Offline Offline

Posts: 83


URL icon « Reply #12 on: October 15, 2007, 05:24:58 PM »

So sweet miki! Hope you all have splendid memories of the trip for a long while.

Linda
IP address Logged
noiseboy
Newbie
*

Festivation rating 0
Offline Offline

Posts: 1


URL icon « Reply #13 on: June 02, 2008, 07:39:13 AM »

Sam Bush uses these nifty Dampit humidifier thingys.

http://www.playbetterbluegrass.com/dampit_humidifier_4514_prd1.htm

just soak them in water, squeeze out the excess and stick them in the f-hole.

Now Playing icon Listening to: The Frames
IP address Logged
old9600
Newbie
*

Festivation rating 0
Offline Offline

Posts: 6


URL icon « Reply #14 on: March 09, 2009, 03:05:07 PM »

I hydrate my Collings guitar which seems to need it.  You're right, you have to be careful not to over do it so I squeeze out all excess moisture out before inserting the humidifier in the sound hole.  My BRW mandolin on the other hand does fine without humidifying; I'm not sure why.  I make a point to keep the instruments on the second floor because apparently moisture in a house rises.  Basements are supposed to be the worst place to keep them. 

Now Playing icon Listening to: Peter Rowan
IP address Logged
Pages: [1] 2 Go upGo Up Print 
« previous next »
Jump to:  

Planet Bluegrass | Facebook | Twitter | Shop | Festivarian Forum rss feed Powered by SMF | SMF © Simple Machines LLC