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	<title>The Guitar Workshop Blog &#187; Dave Carroll</title>
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		<title>Flying with Guitars and photographic Equipment</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2009 18:52:11 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Flying with Guitars, best Travel Cases Click Here]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Flying with Guitars and Photographic Equipment By Bruce Lamb http://www.CaseXtreme.com If you are a guitar player or band member or make a living with anything that can be broken on an airplane or flight on any airline this article is for you. I invented a case that is 100% used and intended for protecting anything [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #008000;"><strong>Flying with Guitars and Photographic Equipment</strong></span><br />
By Bruce Lamb<br />
<a title="guitar flight cases casextreme" href="http://www.CaseXtreme.com">http://www.CaseXtreme.com</a></p>
<p>If you are a guitar player or band member or make a living with anything that can be broken on an airplane or flight on any airline this article is for you. I invented a case that is 100% used and intended for protecting anything if you use airline travel. Although if you travel or ship anything on UPS, FedX or other shipping companies please listen up this article will save you money and grief if you are traveling with something that you don&#8217;t want destroyed while traveling.</p>
<p>First I&#8217;ll give me some of my background. I have been a videographer for 23 years and am also a guitar player. I was traveling with a group of well know acoustic guitar players and was in Las Vegas at a the (NATPE) trade show. This is a trade show where companies buy and sell television programs. I was promoting a show concept on learning to play guitar and had these guys playing in my booth. The name of the show is &#8220;<a title="Learn how to Play Guitar here" href="http://www.TheGuitarworkshop.com">The Guitar TV Workshop</a><a title="learn to play guitar web site" href="http://www.TheGuitarworkshop.com">&#8220;</a> which is now an online lesson website were you can by DVD guitar lessons or take lessons on line. There are hundreds of hours of lessons on learning to play guitar on Acoustic Blues to Hawaiian Slack Key, or Ki ho &#8216;alu. The web site is<a title="learn to play guitar web site" href="http://www.TheGuitarworkshop.com"><br />
</a><a title="Learn Guitar from Grammy winners" href="http://www.TheGuitarworkshop.com">http://www.TheGuitarWorkShop.com</a><a title="learn to play guitar web site" href="http://www.TheGuitarworkshop.com"> </a>The Artist or Instructors playing in my booth were<br />
John Cephas, Martin Simpson, Woody Mann, and Orville Johnson all award winning players.</p>
<p>When I arrived in Las Vegas and went to get my bags, camera equipment, and guitars everything looked fine. I went to the hotel checked in and we hit the town. When I returned to my room I thought I would play a bit of guitar. That&#8217;s when I found the problem. I grabbed my National Steel guitar and when I started to play it just went thunk. The bridge got pushed in from something heavy being put on top of the case or a baggage handler inside crawling over it. The cone got pushed in as well and when I called the airline they said I only had 4 hour to file a claim. Or I got your screwed.<span id="more-33"></span></p>
<p>That evening we all went to dinner and we all talked about the problems of traveling with our guitars and me my photographic and video equipment. All the instructors were using the same type of travel guitar cases. They were heavy cases around 28 lbs. each and very expensive over $750 and up. The thing is that they all said that these were the best out there. When I asked them have they ever had their guitars broken in them they all said yes. That&#8217;s when I decided that something had to be done. I wanted to design a case that could <a title="Learn How to Protect your guitar here" href="http://www.CaseXtreme.com">protect your instrument </a>or camera gear and be affordable.</p>
<p>After 3 years of research and trial and error I designed the Clam Guitar Flight Case, and started<a title="Guitar cases for air Travel" href="http://www.CaseXtreme.com" target="_self"> http://www.CaseXtreme.com</a> . I knew that one of the major problems with every other case out in the world was that they were too heavy. The old story &#8220;the heavier they are the harder they fall&#8221; made total sense to me, I knew that to invent a case that would work needed to be light in weight and have adequate shock resistances built into the design.</p>
<p>One day the light bulb hit me like a ton of bricks. I had just received a DVD player in the mail that I ordered. I order stuff all the time from a company out of state so I don&#8217;t have to pay state sales tax. For large ticket items this can save you a bunch of money. Anyway this equipment had Styrofoam pads on each corner in a cardboard box that had space around it so nothing is touching the equipment.</p>
<p>So now I had a very sturdy material and I found the toughest foam money can buy and I designed the Clam by<a title="Guitar travel Cases for Airline" href="http://www.CaseXtreme.com" target="_self"> </a><a title="Guitar flight case website" href="http://www.CaseXtreme.com">CaseXtreme</a>. <a title="See Video Tossing Guitar from Roof Here" href="http://www.CaseXtreme.com">http://www.CaseXtreme.com</a> I designed the foam suspension system or foam C-Pads that go around your guitar case or gig bag and found the shock absorption system was born. Here is a link to a video on my site of me  throwing my guitar off my roof top in the Clam case onto the pavement. <a title="tossing guitar of of roof video" href="http://www.CaseXtreme.com/newest_video.html" target="_self">http://casextreme.com/newest_video.html</a></p>
<p>For Guitar Lessons on DVD&#8217;s and Online taught by Grammy Award Winning artist and instructors, teaching acoustic guitar, <a title="Acoustic Blues Guitar Lessons Here" href="http://www.TheGuitarWorkShop.com">blues</a>, fnger style, <a title="Hawaiian Slack Key Lessons Here" href="http://www.TheGuitarWorkShop.com">Hawaiian</a> Slack key guitar <a title="Learn how to Play Guitar here" href="http://www.TheGuitarWorkShop.com">(Click Here)</a></p>
<p> </p>
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<div  mce_tmp="1">Here is another link showing me hitting the case with a hammer.<br />
<a title="youtube video" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MvTQE7AZjoE" mce_href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MvTQE7AZjoE" target="_self">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MvTQE7AZjoE</a></div>
<div  mce_tmp="1">All other guitar cases out on the market don&#8217;t have adequate padding to protect them and to keep this from happening a case must have adequate room between the bridge and the outside of the case. The C-Pads in the Clam prevent this from happening.<br />
When the lid of the Clam closes it clamps down on the C-Pads and the edge of the guitar<br />
case and locks the C-Pads in place.</div>
<div  mce_tmp="1">Try this before you put your guitar on a plane. With your guitar in its case and lying flat on the ground place the heel or palm of your hand just over the bridge and push in, if it flexes at all your guitar can get damaged. If it doesn’t flex now it will after a couple of flights. A standard guitar case will gradually get weaker over time and after every flight.<br />
If you can feel the bridge of your guitar when you do try this test don’t even think of using you existing case when you check it in on a plane.</div>
<div  mce_tmp="1">(A brief note on gate checking.)   Before my National got smashed on a previous flight I had my Taylor WC14 in its case and I gate checked it. (for those who don’t know) You hand your guitar off to a flight attendant and they hand it to a baggage handler to put it on top of the pile of luggage on your plane. When you get to your destination another baggage handler is supposed to take your guitar off the top of the pile and walk it up to your plane so it&#8217;s waiting for you just outside the cabin door when you depart.</div>
<div  mce_tmp="1">Well I have done this several times but on this flight when I landed I saw the luggage ramp placed at the bottom of the plane while looking out the window. The first thing that came off the plane was my guitar. A luggage handler took it off the ramp and placed it on the ground. Another handler who was driving the luggage trailers came up behind him grabbed the case and tossed it about eight feet into the trailer. Then the both of them started tossing luggage on top of my guitar until the trailer was full.  I went nuts, and was filling out a complaint about this as soon as I got off the plane. As it turns out my guitar was ok but nobody seemed to give a hoot about the incident it just the way they do it.<br />
Have a safe trip Bruce Lamb<a title="Best Guitar Flight Cases" href="http://www.CaseXtreme.com" mce_href="http://www.CaseXtreme.com" target="_self"> </a><a title="Guitar flight case website" href="http://www.CaseXtreme.com" mce_href="http://www.CaseXtreme.com">http://www.CaseXtreme.com</a> and <a title="learn to play guitar web site" href="http://www.TheGuitarworkshop.com" mce_href="http://www.TheGuitarworkshop.com">http://www.TheGuitarWorkShop.com</a></d >< >< >< >< >< >< >< >< ><--></p>
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