Yeah, may not be worth a trip to the shop just to fix that little cosmetic glitch. OTOH, to answer your question, it's a very easy and inexpensive fix, so if it bothers you, it's no big deal to get it taken care of. A few years back when I had my horn in the shop for a minor repair (I think a pad replacement in the upper stack), my tech noticed a small dent in the neck and asked if I wanted it taken out. I said sure and he went over and grabbed some sort of tool, worked his magic, and in less than a minute or two, it was fixed. I don't think he even charged me anything for that part of the job.Personally I wouldn't bother getting that fixed unless it was just part of other work you're having done. It doesn't affect the pitch, and nobody will ever see it.
A bit off topic, but I'm curious; how, when and why do you decide if a repair is big enough to be charged with your minimum charge or if you just do it for free? It's always easiest to not charge IMHO but no charge isn't enough to pay my bills.if you brought it in just to have the dents done only, likely i would charge 55 as a minimum charge scenario
Ah, but now you've seen it.Personally I wouldn't bother getting that fixed unless it was just part of other work you're having done. It doesn't affect the pitch, and nobody will ever see it.
But the player's opinion is the only opinion that matters when it comes to gear. I assume I'd listen to A Love Supreme as often as I do no matter where Coltrane's sax had been dented ... or no matter what species of sax he played it on.Ah, but now you've seen it.
You missed the joke.But the player's opinion is the only opinion that matters when it comes to gear. I assume I'd listen to A Love Supreme as often as I do no matter where Coltrane's sax had been dented ... or no matter what species of sax he played it on.
So take it in to a tech and get it removed. Shouldn't cost much and you can also have them look for anything important in terms of playing condition that needs fixing.I would love to get it removed