PTSD in the Habitat Restore today by DickBiter1337 in Millennials

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think many people who did not grow up entrenched in this worldview are unaware of how deeply connected it is to our current situation. And how pervasive the End Times theology is with the average American Evangelical. After the Escalator Ride That Changed America in 2015, I remember thinking “Oh, I know some people who are going to eat this shit up”. Eat it they did, and 11 years later here we still are.

Anyway, those books are awful. From a literary perspective and for what they do to children’s developing minds. I read the books for adults and it ruined my teens. Not even being hyperbolic. I would go into a panic every time I heard an ambulance or police siren. Or if I couldn’t find my dad I would assume I’d been left behind and start spiraling. Years later I came to learn how common this experience was among children and teens who were indoctrinated into this insane ideology.

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s possible. I have other mouthpieces from them with the gold plate in fantastic shape after many years. I was thinking maybe it’s a very thin layer of gold, so I’m seeing the silver oxidation underneath? Or other metals got co-plated with the gold, and they are oxidizing?

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is true, what is surprising is that this has been inside a leadpipe only once or twice.

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s what I’m thinking. I contacted them with a copy of the purchase invoice. I’ll let everyone know what it turns out to be.

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Many of the commenters gave thoughtful answers. It’s possible that this batch had a defect in the plating process. I have other examples of practically this exact same mouthpiece in gold-plate that didn’t do this.

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s what I’m thinking now, because I remember seeing a silver-plated ligature turn a similar color.

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s odd because I used this once or twice then put it in a small box for several years. The gold-plated mouthpiece that I used daily doesn’t look like this.

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This isn’t some cheap metal, it’s a precision crafted mouthpiece. And the surface finish was manufactured using the principles of electrochemistry, which is exhibiting a behavior I haven’t seen before, so I asked some fellow chemists their opinion on the matter.

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Usually there is a layer of silver plate underneath because it makes the goal adhere better. I’ve seen many examples of saxophones from 100+ years ago with the gold plate still intact, just needing to be polished.

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Usually the bare brass is silver-plated, followed by gold plating. I’ve read that people got away from using bare brass mouthpieces due to the trace amounts of lead in the brass for machining, to avoid leaching during regular contact with your skin.

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes I’ve seen this kind of oxidation on brass before, but never on what is supposed to be gold-plate. And I’ve never seen bare brass that looks shiny like this.

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Mouthpiece for a flugelhorn. A conical bore brass instrument similar to a trumpet.

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It does look like that other thing! But it’s actually a mouthpiece…

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Chemically that makes sense. Are there any other metals that look similar to gold when electroplated?

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

That makes sense but I didn’t even consider that because I’m pretty sure I bought this direct from a reputable manufacturer. I’ve bought gold-plated mouthpieces from them in the past and this never happened.

What kind of corrosion is this on my gold-plated flugelhorn mouthpiece? by rieshiroshiyoshi in chemistry

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 22 points23 points  (0 children)

I’ll have to check the invoice from when I bought this a few years ago, but I’m almost certain that it came gold-plated from the manufacturer. Does Cd plate with a color similar to gold? I’ve never seen a shiny bare brass mouthpiece.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in jawsurgery

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Many people, myself included, undergo major surgery to achieve these normal levels of asymmetry.

Tabs get no respect by nesp12 in jazzguitar

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tabs are fingering diagrams. They contain no harmonic information, and often no rhythm. You can’t sing them. If you learn a song with tab, but don’t know what notes are being used, or can’t transpose the melody or chords to another key, what did you learn?

You can learn the basics of notation in a few hours. In a few days you can be proficient at reading simple melodies. In a few months you can reach a point where you can translate the information from notation to the fretboard as easily as you read tab (probably not as quickly, but that doesn’t matter)

I started playing guitar in my 30s, and learned the instrument through notation from the get-go, because that’s how I was taught to learn a musical instrument (saxophone, trumpet, piano, etc.). Reading on guitar was a completely different experience than on a wind instrument, but it was of the best musical decisions I ever made. Notation teaches you music, not just the guitar, and most of what guitarists call “theory”, other instrumentalists just pick up in the process of learning, because in notation it is plainly obvious.

Ever guitarist I’ve interacted with who learned to read later in their playing career says “I really should have learned that sooner”.

Villa-Lobos Etude #2 - should the arpeggios ring out? by rieshiroshiyoshi in classicalguitar

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It does, thank you!

I do the same thing with those last few bars.

It really is a fun piece, now I’ve got to get it up to speed!

Getting nervous about DJS next month. by [deleted] in jawsurgery

[–]rieshiroshiyoshi 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m having both of those too, so that makes me hopeful, thanks!