Regarding A. B. Bonds comments on burnt shellac --
I don't burn it. I put about two cups of yellow, cheap hardware-store
shellac in a large shallow disposable pie pan and let it evaporate in an
open, ventilated area, stirring once and a while. After a while, it
thickens up to about 1/4 cup of "thin molasses" consistency, and I put it
in a baby food jar. It lasts a *long* time! And, there's not much to
clean up!
While "burnt" or "ultra-thick" shellac is a bit messy to use, it seals
like nothing else, and it makes future repairs very easy. I use it
wherever such shellac was originally used in a piano's player mechanism
if at all possible.
Patrick Mullarky
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