regarding a blanket ban on (running) dremel tools
you see, the thing is, it really wants a delicate touch to tune reeds..
the objective is to change the relative mass in a bare minimum manner
to achieve the desired result.. removed steel does not grow back..
a running dremel tool can remove an incredible amount of mass
in an instant
in the hands of a ham fisted amateur (who, to begin with, is hardly
likely to be touching the reed in the best spot) then having to re-touch
higher or lower again.. again.. again..
and then, the amplification of the internet.. we go from one idiot
giving advise somewhere on how to tune reeds based on his or her uneducated,
ill advised method, which seemed to work for a minute and so gets bragged,
then repeated by someone who read it, then repeated again until it becomes
internet fact
oh, by the way.. those previously bragged upon dremeled reeds have been
snapping in two because of the heat-induced loss of temper, the weakness
in the vicinity of the flex point.. and did that ever get re-reported by the surprised
original wizard-of-the-repairshop poster ?
of course a professional who knows their stuff can use any tool they
see fit that will work, but even in skilled hands, a split second from
a bee in your shop flying past your head is all it takes for a running Dremel
to ruin a reed
so for the benefit and protection of the amateur repair people, i truly
prefer the speculative advise of idiots to be sent into a black hole,
lest a well meaning and even rather careful normal person be fooled
into following some actually really bad, though seemingly reasonable,
advise, and then ruining their accordion
and the only good Dremel tool is one with a cold, dead battery
maybe this sounds harsh, but disinformation gets wings on the internet