badtothebone
New member
I did not think it was possible, but our brother catwhacker has come up with a new board that has blown me away.
Yesterday I got a sample of his new 3/8 inch open read board, and request to try it out beat on it hard and wring it out. And I did.
All I can say is that this is the most impressive small board I have used in a long long time. The three eighths inch size brings a whole set of qualities that some of the larger tone boards don't have. It is easy to blow, loud, and the tone and different sounds I could get from it are off the chart cool.
A lot of the smaller tone boards tend to lock up and most people shy away from them. This board does not, I repeat not, lock up. I jumped on it as hard as I could and all it does is get raspier and better.
Anyway I brought it to the farm with me this week; we are in lambing season but if you send me a private message and set up a time for a phone call I'd be glad to get on the phone with you and play this thing for you let you know what it sounds like and I have a feeling it's going to start being a go to call on many people's lanyards.
Whack man has developed a process to make these boards one at the time using a jig process. The results are out of this world.
Rudy
Yesterday I got a sample of his new 3/8 inch open read board, and request to try it out beat on it hard and wring it out. And I did.
All I can say is that this is the most impressive small board I have used in a long long time. The three eighths inch size brings a whole set of qualities that some of the larger tone boards don't have. It is easy to blow, loud, and the tone and different sounds I could get from it are off the chart cool.
A lot of the smaller tone boards tend to lock up and most people shy away from them. This board does not, I repeat not, lock up. I jumped on it as hard as I could and all it does is get raspier and better.
Anyway I brought it to the farm with me this week; we are in lambing season but if you send me a private message and set up a time for a phone call I'd be glad to get on the phone with you and play this thing for you let you know what it sounds like and I have a feeling it's going to start being a go to call on many people's lanyards.
Whack man has developed a process to make these boards one at the time using a jig process. The results are out of this world.
Rudy