Here is both calls before the swap.

And the final product.

Moderator: Throbbin Rods
Tomkat wrote:Happy you made it work, but sad you left the crack pipe bunch, less than a week after I got your picture with Mr Haydel.
Shaun Patrick wrote:What do you mean you butchered the guts? Did you sand or cut on the end piece?
Tuning and working on duck calls is something we should not be afraid of. It's easy to fix a call if you get new reeds and a cork. Trevor Shanahan did a you-tube video of him tuning calls that is very helpful. Every duck-hunter should know how to tune calls. It's not hard.MOhuntingGuy wrote:Shaun Patrick wrote:What do you mean you butchered the guts? Did you sand or cut on the end piece?
Just jacked up the reeds beyond repair. Never got around to getting replacement ones.
aunt betty wrote:Tuning and working on duck calls is something we should not be afraid of. It's easy to fix a call if you get new reeds and a cork. Trevor Shanahan did a you-tube video of him tuning calls that is very helpful. Every duck-hunter should know how to tune calls. It's not hard.MOhuntingGuy wrote:Shaun Patrick wrote:What do you mean you butchered the guts? Did you sand or cut on the end piece?
Just jacked up the reeds beyond repair. Never got around to getting replacement ones.
Longer reed makes it lower pitched and takes more air. Less likely to stick.
Shorter reed makes it higher pitched and more likely to stick.
Dog-earing the corners of the reed makes it more raspy.
A good single-reed duck call should be re-corked about once every two weeks if you hunt it hard daily. It makes a difference if the cork is fresh and tight.
Back when I started hunting ducks...some calls actually had reeds in them like a clarinet or a sax.
If you tore up a reed you were done for that day at least. That's why you carried several calls.
Tomkat wrote:aunt betty wrote:Tuning and working on duck calls is something we should not be afraid of. It's easy to fix a call if you get new reeds and a cork. Trevor Shanahan did a you-tube video of him tuning calls that is very helpful. Every duck-hunter should know how to tune calls. It's not hard.MOhuntingGuy wrote:Shaun Patrick wrote:What do you mean you butchered the guts? Did you sand or cut on the end piece?
Just jacked up the reeds beyond repair. Never got around to getting replacement ones.
Longer reed makes it lower pitched and takes more air. Less likely to stick.
Shorter reed makes it higher pitched and more likely to stick.
Dog-earing the corners of the reed makes it more raspy.
A good single-reed duck call should be re-corked about once every two weeks if you hunt it hard daily. It makes a difference if the cork is fresh and tight.
Back when I started hunting ducks...some calls actually had reeds in them like a clarinet or a sax.
If you tore up a reed you were done for that day at least. That's why you carried several calls.
What calls do you use Acorn? I am taking a hard look at an RNT Original....The time has some for me to try single reed calls. Jarbo just wrapped up my crack pipe, looking forward to trying that.
AKPirate wrote:Jason is usually right but sometimes wrong
Flightstopper wrote:Tomkat wrote:aunt betty wrote:Tuning and working on duck calls is something we should not be afraid of. It's easy to fix a call if you get new reeds and a cork. Trevor Shanahan did a you-tube video of him tuning calls that is very helpful. Every duck-hunter should know how to tune calls. It's not hard.MOhuntingGuy wrote:Shaun Patrick wrote:What do you mean you butchered the guts? Did you sand or cut on the end piece?
Just jacked up the reeds beyond repair. Never got around to getting replacement ones.
Longer reed makes it lower pitched and takes more air. Less likely to stick.
Shorter reed makes it higher pitched and more likely to stick.
Dog-earing the corners of the reed makes it more raspy.
A good single-reed duck call should be re-corked about once every two weeks if you hunt it hard daily. It makes a difference if the cork is fresh and tight.
Back when I started hunting ducks...some calls actually had reeds in them like a clarinet or a sax.
If you tore up a reed you were done for that day at least. That's why you carried several calls.
What calls do you use Acorn? I am taking a hard look at an RNT Original....The time has some for me to try single reed calls. Jarbo just wrapped up my crack pipe, looking forward to trying that.
Original is a VERY easy call to run. Never should have sold mine
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
Tomkat wrote:aunt betty wrote:Tuning and working on duck calls is something we should not be afraid of. It's easy to fix a call if you get new reeds and a cork. Trevor Shanahan did a you-tube video of him tuning calls that is very helpful. Every duck-hunter should know how to tune calls. It's not hard.MOhuntingGuy wrote:Shaun Patrick wrote:What do you mean you butchered the guts? Did you sand or cut on the end piece?
Just jacked up the reeds beyond repair. Never got around to getting replacement ones.
Longer reed makes it lower pitched and takes more air. Less likely to stick.
Shorter reed makes it higher pitched and more likely to stick.
Dog-earing the corners of the reed makes it more raspy.
A good single-reed duck call should be re-corked about once every two weeks if you hunt it hard daily. It makes a difference if the cork is fresh and tight.
Back when I started hunting ducks...some calls actually had reeds in them like a clarinet or a sax.
If you tore up a reed you were done for that day at least. That's why you carried several calls.
What calls do you use Acorn? I am taking a hard look at an RNT Original....The time has some for me to try single reed Congrats! calls. Jarbo just wrapped up my crack pipe, looking forward to trying that.
Tomkat wrote:Flightstopper put the idea in my head and I have been researching them ever since. I like hedge; will it matter one bit if I go that route on an Original?
Tomkat wrote:Flightstopper put the idea in my head and I have been researching them ever since. I like hedge; will it matter one bit if I go that route on an Original?
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
The Duck Hammer wrote:Tomkat wrote:Flightstopper put the idea in my head and I have been researching them ever since. I like hedge; will it matter one bit if I go that route on an Original?
You will not be able to buy a hedge from RNT any more. They have discontinued the production of hedge calls. The material of the call will effect the sound of the call. I have both a Cocobola and an Acrylic Original. Of the two I prefer the acrylic for two reasons. 1) I like the louder, sharper sound of the acrylic, 2) Acrylic is far more durable and you dont have to worry about swelling.
AKPirate wrote:Jason is usually right but sometimes wrong
The Duck Hammer wrote:Tomkat wrote:Flightstopper put the idea in my head and I have been researching them ever since. I like hedge; will it matter one bit if I go that route on an Original?
You will not be able to buy a hedge from RNT any more. They have discontinued the production of hedge calls. The material of the call will effect the sound of the call. I have both a Cocobola and an Acrylic Original. Of the two I prefer the acrylic for two reasons. 1) I like the louder, sharper sound of the acrylic, 2) Acrylic is far more durable and you dont have to worry about swelling.
Bootlipkiller wrote: all the mallards I killed today had boners do to my epic calling.
3legged_lab wrote:The Duck Hammer wrote:Tomkat wrote:Flightstopper put the idea in my head and I have been researching them ever since. I like hedge; will it matter one bit if I go that route on an Original?
You will not be able to buy a hedge from RNT any more. They have discontinued the production of hedge calls. The material of the call will effect the sound of the call. I have both a Cocobola and an Acrylic Original. Of the two I prefer the acrylic for two reasons. 1) I like the louder, sharper sound of the acrylic, 2) Acrylic is far more durable and you dont have to worry about swelling.
Ask tnal about african blackwood, its the closest to acrylic I've ever seen.
Tomkat wrote:Thats why you need a chipper chain
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