Let's say you buy a new accordion (the acoustic kind). What is the typical maintenance that you would do (or have done) over the lifetime of that instrument? And, perhaps as a preface to that, what is the lifetime?
These answers will depend on the quality of the instrument, where you play, how often, how hard, etc. But what are your experiences as players and repairmen? Not just in recent times, but also going back decades to when the accordion was more popular and repairmen more common.
Doing spot tuning and fixes when small issues arise would seem obvious. In this way you keep everything running smoothly. But at some point (many years) the wax and valves will start acting up, or the reeds will get dirty/rusty from playing conditions. You could, again, spot fix those as they pop up, but what if this start happening more often, or many reeds get affected at once. Do you get the whole instrument overhauled? Do you allow for multiple such overhauls up until the cost reaches a certain value of the instrument? Or is the requirement for a full overhaul a sign that you need to move on?
At what point do you decide to part with, or at least retire, the instrument? Excluding sentimental reasons and wanting a new instrument to follow whatever sound is currently in vogue, what is the point where it is no longer worth maintaining?
These answers will depend on the quality of the instrument, where you play, how often, how hard, etc. But what are your experiences as players and repairmen? Not just in recent times, but also going back decades to when the accordion was more popular and repairmen more common.
Doing spot tuning and fixes when small issues arise would seem obvious. In this way you keep everything running smoothly. But at some point (many years) the wax and valves will start acting up, or the reeds will get dirty/rusty from playing conditions. You could, again, spot fix those as they pop up, but what if this start happening more often, or many reeds get affected at once. Do you get the whole instrument overhauled? Do you allow for multiple such overhauls up until the cost reaches a certain value of the instrument? Or is the requirement for a full overhaul a sign that you need to move on?
At what point do you decide to part with, or at least retire, the instrument? Excluding sentimental reasons and wanting a new instrument to follow whatever sound is currently in vogue, what is the point where it is no longer worth maintaining?