Dear all,

As announced some months ago on the lutenet, I have been inquiring after 
having flight cases made for lutes and theorboes.  Now that I have succeeded 
in having such a case made, have picked it up and travelled with it, I thought 
I would pass on my findings to my fellow pluckers.
 
I had been in contact with one of the major musical flight case manufacturers 
in Europe, Alan Stevenson, who does all the cases for the LSO, Berliner Phil, 
etc and even that James Bond movie with the "cello-sled" chase scene.  See:  

www.stevensoncases.co.uk

Although he had considered to make cases at my insistence for lute 
instruments, he ultimatly decided against it simply because he felt there was 
not the market to warrant his investment in research.  He *would* technically 
make me a case, but a one-off (i.e. not a mould-derived) venture that would 
cost zillions.  So not really practical.  Very kindly, he decided to speak 
with one of his colleagues and came up with the following solution.

He knew another firm that makes cases for Formula 1 racing components - hyper-
expensive and delicate car parts that have to get shipped around the globe 
safely.  See:

www.quentorcases.com

With Alan's specialist knowledge of music cases, he helped to design a theorbo 
case with Quentor that is even stronger than his own (made of lightweight 
aluminium), and "reasonably" priced.  My case cost 685 GBP, whereas the 
equivalent "about-town" lightweight case by Kingham would be about 450 GBP.  

Now that I have received the Quentor case, I can say that the drawbacks are 
that it is heavy (with my HUGE Schelle - 196cm long, 208cm in case - it weighs 
25.64 kg) and big, since the instrument floats inside the case, with a 4-7cm 
perimeter of air and foam between it and the interior wall (this takes up lots 
of room).  The advantages are more or less absolute safety of instrument 
(including heat and water resistance), being able to have the theorbo you want 
and not the one British Airways lets you have, moveable interior padding that 
can be reconfigured to fit any long-necked lute, and that the whole thing is 
on wheels so that it can be rolled around.

I ultimately did decide to get a Kingham case too for my theorbo, simply 
because the Quentor case is tricky to get around and unnecessary for everyday 
life, getting on the metro, rehearsals, local gigs, etc.  But that said, you 
*can* get around with the Quentor on tour.

And for smaller lutes, I think I will probably go for Quentor in future, since 
they would be completely manageable for about town *and* safe on aeroplanes.  
A 10c lute case from them would probably only weigh about 6kg and have wheels 
to boot.  This is twice a Kingham's weight, but totally manageable and 
actually safe.

Regarding Kingham cases (and perhaps other such manufacturers), I should point 
out that I am *not* in any way trying to say that such cases are not good.  I 
own several Kinghams, and am very impressed with their workmanship and 
professionalism.  Kingham cases do *excellently* what they were designed to 
do - namely, be "about town" cases.  But they are *not* designed for air 
travel, and every musician I know who has put such a case in the hold of an 
aeroplane has lost a lute.  This is a price I am not willing to pay.  Nor am I 
willing to lose work when a patron doesn't wish to buy a second seat for my 
lute.  Indeed, it is for this very reason that I have yet to see Japan - and I 
am rather miffed about that! 

There has been recent talk on the lutnet of the fibreglass reinforcement that 
Kingham offers. I have just been to Kingham personally, and have seen the 
compound, how they apply it, and have discussed air travel with Steve.  
Although the fibreglass *is* good reinforcement, and although I have it on 
several of my cases, it is does *not* make a Kingham-type case fit for air 
travel - nor is it designed to do so.  Only the joints are covered in 
fibreglass, but critical areas such as over the soundboard are no more 
protected - although they can use a thicker piece of plywood than normal.  
This is however insufficient to survive the airlines.  The fibreglass provides 
better wear and tear, and more protection should something press into the 
case.  It does not mean the case can be thrown, walked on, dropped from the 
plane's hold down 6m to the tarmac at Heathrow airport, or fall off a moving 
baggage lorry.  These things happen!!!  My rule is that a Kingham-type case is 
great when the instrument is with me; when the instrument is not, it goes in 
the Quentor. 

For those intereted, the man at Quentor to talk to is Gavin Stagg, and his 
contact information is availale on the website listed above.
  
Anyway, I hope this may help some of you decide how to travel with your 
lutes!  

I can't tell you all how many times over the last several months I wished I 
had played the piccolo!

As ever,

Benjamin



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