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Square-end reed shoes and valves


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One of my older concertinas - a William Dove (?) around mid-1850s -  has square-ended reed shoes and square-cut valves. All other concertinas I have seen have rounded shoes and valves. Is there a technical reason for the rounding? Rounded valves seem more difficult to make.

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The rounded shoes are because all but the very early instruments had the reed pan slots machined with a rotary tool that can't cut sharp internal corners.

 

Rounded valves look a bit neater, and my understanding of how steel rule die cutters are made is that isn't difficult to bend the strip of knife steel around a former to make it produce a rounded cut, whereas to make it cut a sharp corner you have to cut the knife steel into two pieces, bevel the ends, and weld them back together. Once you have made the die, it's just as easy to punch out a valve with it regardless of the shape of the cutting edge.

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Square cut valves are quite common.  All of the vintage Jeffries, a George Jones and a pre 1900 Crabb I've received in unrestored condition had square cut valves.  Lachenal and Wheatsone seemed to have rounded valves from early on - although the photos from the Concertina Museum show square cut valves on very early instruments

 

Alex West

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the big hand-cut valves on the baritones and double acting bass instruments usually are square cut, with the tip corners clipped. Jeffries anglos often seem to have started life with square tipped valves as well

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2 hours ago, Stephen Selby said:

In another current discussion, I just noticed this...

http://www.concertinamuseum.com/CM00297.htm

It seems to say that the square shoes ended with Lachenal's improvements in 1848. Can anyone throw further light on that?

 

I believe one of Lachenal's improvements was the invention of the reed pan router machine that cut the slots with a rotary tool.

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