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About Shipping
Flute Arts has a few recommendations to make regarding shipping
your instrument.
Shippers charge by weight and by dimension of the package. Flute
boxes, specially made for shipping flutes, are ideal because of
the packing material inside. It is lightweight and provides
ample protection. If you do not have a flute box, we can
ship one to you before your appointment. There is a flat
fee for the box, but they are reusable, and therefore not expensive
over the lifetime of the box. Instruments shipped without
adequate packaging are sometimes damaged in shipping. If
you don’t use a flute box, please have at least two inches
of padding around the flute and on both ends.
If you want to save a little money, take the heavy things out
of your case cover before you pack it. We don’t need
the pens, tuners, metronomes or lead blocks (actually we could
use the lead blocks) that often accompany flutes, so keep them
with you and that will bring the weight down. This makes
a bigger difference at the Post Office than it does at most of
the other shippers, because they charge mainly by weight, while
the others charge mainly on the basis of dimensions.
Most importantly, make sure your instrument is insured for shipping! Flute
Arts will will not ship an instrument that is not insured for
damage, theft or loss in shipping. If you do not have coverage
for shipping, either through your home-owners policy (for shipping,
it will probably need to be a rider on your policy, but check with
your insurance agent) or through Clarion,
we recommend that you buy the insurance offered by the carrier. They
each have their own types, and they have their own fee structures,
so you will want to investigate that for yourself. We work
as hard as we can to make sure that instruments are shipped reliably.
Shipping does incur some risk, however, and you want to make sure
you are protected against that risk.
Pads
Flute Arts uses the finest pads available in the service of your
instruments. At the same time, we want to work with the kinds of
pads that make our customers comfortable. To date we have used two
different kinds of Lucien Deluxe pads, both of them pressed felt,
as well as the world-renowned Straubinger pads. We are pleased to
announce that we are now making available the new JS pads, designed
and produced by Jim Schmidt at JS Engineering in California.
These pads, just recently placed in the market, are a synthetic
pad whose surface is gold.

The construction of the pad is similar to the Straubinger pad,
using a shell, which holds the pad material. While the Straubinger
pad has a bladder-skin surface wrapped around the shell, the Schmidt
pad has a gold surface tucked into the shell. It is both beautiful
and durable. Better still, it has wonderful acoustic attributes.
The highly reflective surface of the pad makes for a full, resonant
sound. At the same time, it is focused and warm, perhaps some would
say “creamy.”
From a repairman’s point of view, they are simple to work
with, and once level, they are stable.
We hope that you will give these pads a try at your next overhaul. |