Saxophone Neck

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Saxophone Neck

Proven the number 1 marketing woodwind swab for over 25 years, the Original H.W. Pad-Saver de-moisturizer is the woodwind playerâs best friend in instrument maintenance. Designed to be left in the instrument while not being played, these swabs draw and dissipate moisture from the bore, toneholes, and pads, extending the life of the pads and saving cash on standard repairs.

There are so galore dissimilar types of neck straps available today for the saxophonist because we all look for dissimilar things in a neck strap: durability, comfort, looks. I’ve employed everything from the soft comfy ones to a shoe string and a re-shaped coat hanger when my regular one broke and there wasn’t anything else around. Let me tell you, no matter how good the band is you’re playing with, if you’re using a coat hanger for a neck strap you in truth want the gig to be over quick! Note to self: carry a back-up strap.

The saxophone neck strap probably isn’t the percentage of the saxophone we commonly give much thought to even though it plays a huge role in your playing comfortability and in the safety of your sax as well. Some of the most indispensable things to consider when looking for a neck strap that’s going to be just right for you:

material

comfort

durability

security

ease of adjustment

easy to insert and remove

Material & comfort

The material it’s made of will affect how it feels around your neck, exceptionally if you like to wear it inside the collar directly on the skin. I would commend a wide, padded leather strap. These are more costly but are the most comfortable for this kind of use. Also ok for comfortability are the neoprene ones which are a synthetic rubber. These give a slight stretch and make your horn actually feel lighter.

Security

For sax security issues it all depends on which type of player you are: sitting down in a chair or jumping around on a stage. If it’s the later, then you want a saxophone neck strap that has a closed hook on it and not made with cheap plastic because your sax will at last fall right from your hands right on to the floor. Go with the closed hook model to make it totally unlikely for the sax to slip off the hook ring. But still, stay away from cheap plastic because after a while it will break and… bang! Once, for the duration of a live performance the plastic hook on my strap broke while I was in the middle of a wailing solo and my sax went flying to the front of the stage and just regarding hit a couple girls all over the face… I keep out of the way of these types of hooks these days. If you spend all your saxophone playing hours calmly sitting on a chair with no aggressive movement, then a cheap, open hook neck strap will be just fine.

Ease of adjustment

How easy it is to adjust it’s length is very indispensable because you are always going to be adjusting the length of your sax neck strap. Because of the adjustment mechanisms and material of the strap it may be very hard to in truth move the length up and down, peculiarly when very slight, minor adjustments are necessitated and this may get very discouraging and hindering in getting the length just right. A neck strap that adjusts too effortlessly may be even worst because the perfective length you set for yourself will modify too speedily leaving you to perpetually make adjustments. Avoid the actually cheap neck straps for this reason.

Easy to insert and remove

If you are perpetually having to remove your sax very speedily then you may need an open hook. There are hooks that are completely closed and make it inconceivable for your horn to fall off. Personally, I do need to remove my horn constantly for the duration of a performance but I use a closed hook. This does make it a bit more difficult but you do get employed to it and you know the horn isn’t going to fall off

I think the perfective strap has yet to be made. It’s either too soft, too hard, to wide, too thin… and if it isn’t, then there’s something wrong with the hook. Go for what you need the most and remember, it doesn’t injure to have two!


Saxophone Neck

Saxophone Neck Picture

Saxophone Neck

Saxophone Neck Picture

Saxophone Neck

Saxophone Neck Pic

Saxophone Neck

Saxophone Neck Picture


Most helpful client reviews

3 of 4 persons found the following review helpful.
5Great product
By V. ARCHER
My son has employed this absorbent pad for a great deal of years and it works great. It fits well in the neck of his sax and absorbs the moisture to protect the instrument.

2 of 3 persons found the following review helpful.
5Perfect
By Christopher Lai
I’ve been using this product for more than 4 years now and it still holds it is shape and color. I play my sax exceedingly many times as I am in a Big 12 marching band. It works and would unquestionably buy another one if I get another sax.

0 of 0 persons found the following review helpful.
5Also neck saver
By Rubberdoll
This product is just what I was looking for. It helps keep my alto neck arid and clean, and It is very soft and absorbent. Much better than the old one I had.

See all 8 client reviews…

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