@@shaysteamjamb7957 Nathan M horns required frequent tuning and voicing in order to sound proper, the Englewood guys either didn't know how or didn't care to tune them after the first few years, they sounded decent in the 90's but after then they just started fouling and never sounded good again.
@@traindev1 They probably didn't keep up with bleeding the moisture from the air reservoirs. With the moist Pacific air, the horns probably got clogged by oxidation and moisture.
Just a memory now.....
Alas, it certainly is. Thanks for commenting.
horn sure was nails on a chalk board by that point.
That's for sure. It was that way for quite some time. Don't remember why. Something to do with the air supply.
@@shaysteamjamb7957 Nathan M horns required frequent tuning and voicing in order to sound proper, the Englewood guys either didn't know how or didn't care to tune them after the first few years, they sounded decent in the 90's but after then they just started fouling and never sounded good again.
@@traindev1 They probably didn't keep up with bleeding the moisture from the air reservoirs. With the moist Pacific air, the horns probably got clogged by oxidation and moisture.
Why western forest close rail line?😮