C
Efficient for the cleaning
I bought this set for my tenor sax. Im a beginner and i found it easy to use. The only problem with this the case is not very practical to use. After you cleaned your sax its not very possible to put it back into the case. I use another case to store the set and it works for me. But its a great deal for the money so i recommend it.
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i
Very good but may get stuck in alto, cord could be tougher.
I didn't realise how much I was missing with my old bargain-basement pull through swab. The cloth, neck and body pull-throughs are all made of a fine but heavy and absorbent, almost suede-ette cloth. The whole set is nicely made and feels good, but the cord needs to be a tougher fabric (more on that later). The cord has weights inside the fabric, which makes it super easy to use without scratching.
I always use the body swab first - but the first few times it got stuck on the octave pip of my (Jupiter) alto, and took about 10 minutes to tease it through. Do not yank hard on the cord, it is not that strong. After 5-6 uses and a wash, the cloth relaxed a bit and now fits through easily. Make sure the cloth is rolled as thin as possible when you put it in the bell, redo if you need to. If it does stick, go slow and just tease the bit you can reach. You could trim the cloth to be smaller for an alto, but I did not. It dries very well.
I use the cloth to just swab some of the normally-shut pads before using a Keyleaves Spitsponge or similar. I think it would be fair for polishing but I never do.
The neck crook - I don't use it for sax, I let the neck dry on its own. It is a good pull through for flute instead of a cleaning rod. I use it as a pullthrough for clarinet too, but the rough register pip of the clarinet ripped the fabric of the cord, and once ripped it will get run and get worse. The cord also has weights at the end for ease.
The cord is basically like a shoelace made of a very soft thread. A tougher shoelace would be better. If you're good with a needle and thread you can fix it, or just don't use it with a clarinet.
The case is simple and strong, but if you're practicing every day it's not worth putting the cloths away - just put them on a radiator to dry after use. To get it all in the case, lay all the cloths flat and fold into quarters, then roll it up. The case screws together, mine is 21cm x 7 x 7 when full.
Overall it's not perfect but good value. It helps with taking cleaning seriously after practice, and so helps you make the pads last longer. Once the too-tight phase has passed, cleaning is much faster than with cheaper swabs.
I always use the body swab first - but the first few times it got stuck on the octave pip of my (Jupiter) alto, and took about 10 minutes to tease it through. Do not yank hard on the cord, it is not that strong. After 5-6 uses and a wash, the cloth relaxed a bit and now fits through easily. Make sure the cloth is rolled as thin as possible when you put it in the bell, redo if you need to. If it does stick, go slow and just tease the bit you can reach. You could trim the cloth to be smaller for an alto, but I did not. It dries very well.
I use the cloth to just swab some of the normally-shut pads before using a Keyleaves Spitsponge or similar. I think it would be fair for polishing but I never do.
The neck crook - I don't use it for sax, I let the neck dry on its own. It is a good pull through for flute instead of a cleaning rod. I use it as a pullthrough for clarinet too, but the rough register pip of the clarinet ripped the fabric of the cord, and once ripped it will get run and get worse. The cord also has weights at the end for ease.
The cord is basically like a shoelace made of a very soft thread. A tougher shoelace would be better. If you're good with a needle and thread you can fix it, or just don't use it with a clarinet.
The case is simple and strong, but if you're practicing every day it's not worth putting the cloths away - just put them on a radiator to dry after use. To get it all in the case, lay all the cloths flat and fold into quarters, then roll it up. The case screws together, mine is 21cm x 7 x 7 when full.
Overall it's not perfect but good value. It helps with taking cleaning seriously after practice, and so helps you make the pads last longer. Once the too-tight phase has passed, cleaning is much faster than with cheaper swabs.
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W
Good kit, impractical storage
It's easy to use for cleaning, but the case it comes in is tedious to use. It takes way too long to fold the cloth to fit the case, so I just don't use the case at all.
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J
Best cleaning set of those I've tried
Easy to use and cleans very good.
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T
perfect packaging
I have bought many cleaning kits over the years and this one has the best packaging/storage idea ever. Keeping it rolled up in a small tube is perfect to keep in the case at all times with nothing rolling around. Love it. The only small complaint is that you have to roll it real tight for all three cloths to fit back in the tube.
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Je
Not good for alto sax
Broke off and got stuck in the neck of the saxophone and had a hard time getting the cloth part out
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b
Fine, inexpensive swaps
Evidently nothing special. Just the essentials working as intended.
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NM
Very bad set
Maybe good for tenor, but not for Alto as keeps getting stuck in the neck
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DS
A must
I don't mind the plastic case everyone is complaining about. It's a good pair of swabs and a cloth, does the work and doesn't cost a fortune.
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d
Great quality cloths
Essential cleaning gear for your beloved sax with great quality
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