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Posted: Thu Mar 21, 2002 1:42 am
by jmssmh
I was just wondering if anyone owns the Mel Bay whistle and how it compares to other cheap whistles.

Joe

Posted: Thu Mar 21, 2002 3:23 am
by aremnius
I had one, gave it away.

When I removed the glue to make the whistle tuneable, the mouthpiece somewhat stayed on, but had a very loose fit. Hence it does not seem to be a good idea to loosen the glue on these whistles.

The body was very shiny brass, and as I recall was fairly heavy, so that was a plus.

Soundwise it was completely average. I don't know how else to describe it. It was completely in the middle of my collection of cylindrical brass cheap whistles. I got rid of it because I found that, although it was playable, it lacked any of the character qualities that would make me want to pick up, say, a Feadog one day and then a Generation that evening and then the Walton's... for better or for worse, the otheres are all distinctive to me. The Mel Bay was not.

Just my .02, maybe some people have had a better experience.

Sarah

Posted: Thu Mar 21, 2002 3:28 am
by rich
On 2002-03-21 04:23, aremnius wrote:

When I removed the glue to make the whistle tuneable, the mouthpiece somewhat stayed on, but had a very loose fit. Hence it does not seem to be a good idea to loosen the glue on these whistles.
Or, loosen the glue and apply some teflon tape.

<ul>-Rich</ul>

Posted: Thu Mar 21, 2002 3:53 am
by jmssmh
I love teflon tape!

Joe

Posted: Thu Mar 21, 2002 6:13 am
by JohnPalmer
I have one. It sits in my unused basket of WhOa whistles. Every once in a while I take out this basket and go through all the whistles. Then I put it back up for many months. So the Mel Bay rarely gets played. Mine has a very bright sound, kind of edgy, raspy, not that clear type of tone. But I think that it could work for someone. It's like love--there is a whistle for everyone.