Suggestions? (Others than hydrochloric acid, please).
Here a picture of the batch, for your inspiration:

Thought with Rhino horn, you'd be getting 'wood' from down undercharangohabsburg wrote:Thanks for your suggestions.
So far I was thinking along the same lines but thought it also would be nice to straighten those buggers. Except the really bent one which I think I will run through the coffee mill and throw it on the market as rhinoceros horn powder.Then, with that money I will buy some nice timber from down under.
Whatever. I get four.Allen wrote:You should be able to cut in half and get 2 ukulele nuts out of each one.That's what I'd do.
Hey Kim, do you want to get me into trouble with the local bone welfare organization?Kim wrote: [...] lock them all inside teenie weenie individual cages which, apart from having a very flat bottom, have been purposely built to be 'far' too small for them.
Switched to wearing boxers have we Martykiwigeo wrote:Introducing my new product line.....free range nuts and saddles.
That is what I have done yesterday evening. This was the result after having it left clamped overnight:pavliku wrote: [...]
As for straightening.... well I have no experience doing this. The first experiment would be to boil it for a while then clamp it flat.
Paul
Great to hear you've had some success there Markus but I feel confident that had the old masters had penicillin at their disposal they would have tried my suggestion first....yeeeehaaaaaarrr!!!charangohabsburg wrote:
Hmmm... how did the old masters bend the ivory ribs of their most exquisite lutes?![]()
So I took the blank to the bending iron and straightened it out in three minutes!
Well, time showed it was not worth the effort:charangohabsburg wrote:Is it worth the effort? I think yes - if the bugger does not get out of shape again! Time will show.
Cut in half and used on ukes?charangohabsburg wrote:To use the material for other things than conventional guitar saddles is the way to go, at least for me after having done the experiment described above.
Cheers,
Exactly. And also for charangos (2/3), or cut into thin strips for reinforcing the edges of the tie block:Nick wrote:Cut in half and used on ukes?charangohabsburg wrote:To use the material for other things than conventional guitar saddles is the way to go, at least for me after having done the experiment described above.
Cheers,
OK, I'll hammer them into the bridge slots.Chopper wrote:Hey Markus,
My post was written with my tongue planted firmly in my cheek because we seem to be going to so much trouble for such a small ticket item.
Cheers John
Chopper wrote:Hey Markus,
My post was written with my tongue planted firmly in my cheek because we seem to be going to so much trouble for such a small ticket item.
Cheers John
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