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#138483 - 10/10/03 08:41 AM traveling by airplane-any advice?
Philip1 Offline
Member

Registered: 11/24/99
Posts: 37
Loc: Jerusalem, Israel
I'm going to be on an 8 hour flight, so I'm a little worried what to do with my 2100. Of course, I'll put it in a bag, but the question is what else I could/should do. I've been told that the airlines don't let one take a keyboard like that on board the aircraft, so it has to go in as regular luggage. Should I make a fuss about that? Should I put some extra padding in the bag (towels, etc.)?

Any advice/comments appreciated!

Philip
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#138484 - 10/10/03 08:46 AM Re: traveling by airplane-any advice?
Uncle Dave Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 12800
Loc: Penn Yan, NY
I wouldn't trust it in the cargo area without a HARD case. Period.
Don't take a foolish cnance. ATA cases are heavy and expensive, but there are other alternatives that will protect as well. The important thing to remember is that YOU will not be handling the kb. Amimals do that for you.
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#138485 - 10/10/03 09:39 AM Re: traveling by airplane-any advice?
Scottyee Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 10427
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area, CA, US...
Murhy's Law most definitely applies here! Phillip, don't even 'think about' entrusting any valuable musical keyboard as checked luggage without first ensuring that it's properly stored in an 'ATA certified' hard case. Not doing this is just 'asking for' disaster. Anvil & Calzone are 2 leading manufacterers of ATA certified keyboard hard cases. Calzone recently introduced a new ATA hard case which consists of a new light material called XLT-1 . XLT-1 is a rugged polypropylene trilaminate that is 30-35% lighter than traditional plywood ATA cases. Curious if anyone here owns or has had the chance to checkout these new XLT-1 cases.
http://www.calzonecase.com/html/Calzone_products/XLT-1.htm

Scott
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#138486 - 10/10/03 09:51 AM Re: traveling by airplane-any advice?
travlin'easy Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
You are much better off if you ship the keyboard in it's orriginal carton via UPS to the destination ahead of time. It is less expensive, it can be insured, they are a responsible company, it can be tracked from any computer, and they will have it there when they say they will. Put in on a plane and there is no insurance that it will not be destroyed by baggage handlers who could care less about your equipment, and if it's lost, the airline could care less. As far as they're concerned, whether it's lost baggage or a lost keyboard--that's your problem.

When you're finished playing the keyboard, pack it back into the same box or hard-case, take it to UPS and send it home. I know of several traveling musicians who have used this method of transportation for years and said it's the safest, least-expensive way to send your equipment anywhere in the world.

Good Luck,

Gary
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#138487 - 10/10/03 12:34 PM Re: traveling by airplane-any advice?
Fran Carango Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 05/26/99
Posts: 9673
Loc: Levittown, Pa, USA
Gary, great idea, if it gets there in time for the job..
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#138488 - 10/10/03 03:14 PM Re: traveling by airplane-any advice?
KN_Fan Offline
Member

Registered: 10/01/02
Posts: 492
Send via UPS, hardcase, BUY insurance.

MY KN6000 was damaged (some ^#()@#!! dropped a heavy SUITCASE in the MIDDLE of it). Broke like probably almost 10 keys, I had to replace THE WHOLE board and still not working properly. It's playable, but the composer has intermittent problem &^%)!!

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#138489 - 10/10/03 03:22 PM Re: traveling by airplane-any advice?
The Accordionist Offline
Member

Registered: 01/25/03
Posts: 221
I absolutely never fly or ship my accordions anywhere. You can't trust baggage handlers and you wouldn't believe what they do to some of these boxes.

I work for a large equipment manufacturer and we had boxed up some equipment in some very product-specific ATA cases and the equipment unbelievably came out of the boxes completely broken. They must have dropped them about 10 feet onto concrete to sustain that kind of damage.

When a top-of-the-line custom accordion costs $7000+ (and you guys thought arrangers were expensive!) you learn to play gigs where you can drive and to leave the flying to the birds.

Tommy

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#138490 - 10/10/03 04:30 PM Re: traveling by airplane-any advice?
brickboo Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 02/04/01
Posts: 2071
Loc: Fruita, Colorado, USA
From 1956 thru 1975 I carried my sax stand in a cloth bag stuck inside the bell of my sax inside the case. No problem.

One trip to New Orleand in a plane, when I took it out dings all over the bell.
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#138491 - 10/10/03 08:27 PM Re: traveling by airplane-any advice?
tony mads usa Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 01/16/02
Posts: 14376
Loc: East Greenwich RI USA
To Accordionist ...... where are you located? ...
t.
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t. cool

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#138492 - 10/10/03 08:34 PM Re: traveling by airplane-any advice?
Dnj Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 09/21/00
Posts: 43703
hey Boo....


1956 I was 4 years old!!!!!!!! YIKES

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