I have a Red Bear pick that has broken in two. Is there an adhesive and/or method to repair it?
I have a Red Bear pick that has broken in two. Is there an adhesive and/or method to repair it?
Money
I can't think of a good repair for this kind of material. Have you tried the website? If I was going to try I would use a super glue gel. IMO you will be better off purchasing a different or new pick. R/
I love hanging out with mandolin nerds . . . . . Thanks peeps ...
There are vintage fountain pens of the material, theyhave ways to repair them in FP forums: http://www.fountainpennetwork.com/fo...-crack-repair/
Kentucky km900
Yamaha piano, clarinet, violin; generic cello;
a pedal steel (highly recommended); banjo, dobro don't get played much cause i'm considerate ;}
Shopping/monitoring prices: vibraphone/marimbas, rhodes, synths, Yamaha brass and double reeds
Considering the stress that's put on a pick, I'd buy a new one. I'm not sure a repair would last long. Few things made out of the same material will have the same amount of stress put on them.
If you try the super glue and it doesn't work, try duct tape. It comes in colors, you know.
David Hopkins
2001 Gibson F-5L mandolin
Breedlove Legacy FF mandolin; Breedlove Quartz FF mandolin
Gibson F-4 mandolin (1916); Blevins f-style Octave mandolin, 2018
McCormick Oval Sound Hole "Reinhardt" Mandolin
McCormick Solid Body F-Style Electric Mandolin; Slingerland Songster Guitar (c. 1939)
The older I get, the less tolerant I am of political correctness, incompetence and stupidity.
I super glued one a few years ago. Sandwiched it in waxed paper and duct tape and flattened it with a hardback copy of War and Peace. It was a seriously thick pick, which helped, and a very clean diagonal break, two clean pieces. It failed eventually, but worked good for a year at least. Blue Chips made that one obsolete.
Mike Snyder
just occurred to me: would be easier to glue the piece with the tip between 2 Tortex picks or s.t. like that
Kentucky km900
Yamaha piano, clarinet, violin; generic cello;
a pedal steel (highly recommended); banjo, dobro don't get played much cause i'm considerate ;}
Shopping/monitoring prices: vibraphone/marimbas, rhodes, synths, Yamaha brass and double reeds
just asking, how did it break? They seem pretty tough to me. If it broke while playing, you might talk to Redbear.
Yes, Red Bear picks can definitely break (there are a number of previous threads about this), and it's not worth trying to execute a repair, which will be prone to failure. Consider trying & buying a BlueChip pick, made of a polyimide polymer. These wear incredibly well, are very nearly impossible to break under any normal playing conditions, and most of the users are very happy with them.
I have never broken one.
I have heard they get brittle or something when they get wet for extended periods, like being left in the pocket when the jeans are washed, or even when, as some do, putting the pick in your mouth while you change a string or something.
I also heard that if you deliberately go about trying to break it, trying to fold it in half, it will break.
With normal use and care I don't know what to think. I have two style C heavy with speed bevel, and twowith out, and I have had them many many years and never had a problem.
Actually I have never had any pick break ever.
Throw it in the trash where it belongs and buy a Blue Chip. The Red Bears break if you just look at them funny.
Shaun Garrity
http://www.youtube.com/user/spgokc78
Goodness sake it's just a bit of plastic, throw it away and get a new one.
Dave H
Eastman 615 mandola
2011 Weber Bitteroot A5
2012 Weber Bitteroot F5
Eastman MD 915V
Gibson F9
2016 Capek ' Bob ' standard scale tenor banjo
Ibanez Artist 5 string
2001 Paul Shippey oval hole
I broke mine when it got into the hinge area of a case and I casually slammed the case shut. The fix was really good for a long time. Gel-type super glue. It was an early RB, black and extra thick. I have never been able to get the same tone out of the tortoise-looking ones.
Mike Snyder
This is the problem with Red Bear picks. I have a couple (you lose them and find them again) and love playing with them, but they break too easily and you're done.
Eastman 605, Strad-o-lin, and Kentucky 300e mandolins.
Mandolinist, Stringtopia, the Long Island Mandolin and Guitar Orchestra
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Do they break just using them or do you have to do something special, like catch them in the case lid described above.
What Shaun said. I had at least one RB that broke on me; a friend sent me one in a regular envelop with no padding, and it arrived in pieces (presumably from the sorting machine). The one I still have now is still in one piece, but I avoid using it as I notice it has started warping from being held for too long. On top of that, it's not exactly easy to get a replacement if you want one. And lastly, I just honestly prefer the tone of a BC over a RB.
Get a Blue Chip and be done with it. You'll never look back.
I stumbled on to this nearly 7 year old string quite by accident -- I picked up in a Google search about pick guard repair.
Anyway, I thought that I would share this observation about pick repair that I made close to a year ago.
I purchase a used casein pick from a fellow MC member via the MCC. I like casein better than any space-age plastic.
The pick was carefully attached to a with index care with a piece of clear packing tape. But it turns out that the surface of casein plastic must have a very rough surface at the microscopic scale because it was literally impossible to get that pick to release from the tape. I could not believe how tightly it was adhered. Anyway as you might have already predicted I snapped the pick trying to get it to release. (I did not want to use water or alcohol -- but maybe I should have). The seller and I quickly came to amicable terms.
But I thought since this primitive milk plastic had adhered so well to tape did that mean it was a good candidate for gluing up the break?
As it turns out the answer is yes.
The repair was as simple as it gets.
I laid the two pieces on a piece of kitchen wax paper pushed them into perfect alignment and slid four large, heavy metal washers gently up to each side to act as a "clamp" and keep the two pieces aligned. Then I laid a small bead of very thin cyanoacrylate glue along the crack. I counted on the glue wicking into the crack. After two hours, I turned the glued pick over and repeated with gluing on the the other side. Gave it 24 hours to cure.
I have now used the pick almost everyday for about 8 to 9 months. I've beaten the snot out of it with absolutely NO REGARD whatsoever for how I hold it or how hard that I beat on it. It's like the EveryReady bunny it takes a licking and keeps on ticking.
Just FYI.
Last edited by Bernie Daniel; Jan-17-2023 at 2:35pm.
Bernie
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Due to current budgetary restrictions the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off -- sorry about the inconvenience.
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