by BMac » Wed Feb 13, 2008 6:36 pm
I've long wanted to explore this subject ... so ... here we go - here we go!
Here's some material to consider, although some of it is under "I heard" and "I believe" and other caveats expressing hearsay and personal opinions and such.
A friend has an older "Raul" conga he bought in Brazil many years ago. I believe it is related to modern Bauers. It looks indistinguishable in many ways. I heard that "Raul" refers to the original craftsman, and the name became "Bauer," reflecting their last name, when the company was taken over by Raul's son.
A store in the U.S. once carried Bauer products. The last time I was there, the store still had many Bauer items. I heard the store imported many Bauer congas and distributed them to customers all over the U.S. I heard the store was Bauer's exclusive U.S. retailer/distributor. I heard the store started getting calls from customers reporting that the Bauer congas were cracking. I heard that the store contacted Bauer and could not come to any return or replacement agreement. I heard that the relationship between the store and Bauer soured. I heard that the store accepted returns from customers and stockpiled the cracked Bauer congas at great expense to the store. I heard all of this three or so years ago.
More recently, I saw that the store was selling repaired Bauers and I saw several cracked Bauer congas waiting for repair in their shop. I saw that several cracked Bauer congas had the tension hooks turned hook-side outward from the shells. I'll call this a reverse-hook configuration. All my congas, and almost all congas I have ever seen, have had their hooks pointed toward the shell. The curvature of a hook typically arcs outward from the drum and the hook typically points toward the shell. Look at almost any photo of any conga and you'll see the typical arrangement. I don't have a photo to offer of a reverse-hook configuration.
At the store, I saw that at least some of the damaged Bauer conga shells had cracks aligned with hooks in reverse-hook configurations.
I have inspected a friends old LP tumba. This old tumba has a reverse-hook configuration. I don't know why. In the reverse-hook configuration, the arc side of the hook comes dangerously close to the shell. If one were to over-tighten the head, or mount the head too deeply, the hook might contact the shell and cause a dangerous pressure point. Maybe somebody can tell us why someone would set up a reverse-hook configuration. I don't like the looks of it. It might hook and tear car seats and such in transportation and would likely at least hook the edge of a bag when being bagged.
I wonder who mounted all those Bauer congas I saw at the store with reverse-hook configurations.
I wonder whether those hooks contacted those shells and caused the cracks.
I don't know whether the store, Bauer, or some other party set those cracked congas up in reverse-hook configurations.
I have a thought:
Whoever set those congas up in reverse-hook configurations may be the guilty party who caused those congas to crack.
It's just a thought.
Regarding the particular situation about which this thread was started, I hate to add to the misery of the new owner of that conga ... but I don't like the looks of that cracked conga. Sure, maybe it can be repaired so that its not useless ... but its an unfair situation for the unknowing buyer.
I can see, however, that the tension hooks are NOT in reverse-hook configuration as I've described above. My remarks and questions above still stand ... but this particular conga is not involved in my above treatise beyond the fact that it is indeed another cracked Bauer conga.
It seems I've seen many cracked Bauer congas ... what gives? I mean, we can pussy-foot around here if we want, for fear of offending the maker ... but at some point, if the emporer is naked, somebody gonna say they don't see his new clothes. Is the emporer naked?
I have questions for the person with the cracked Bauer, the person who started this thread.
Was the seller Bauer?
Was the seller a store in Atlanta?
I have a question for everyone else.
What do you have to offer on this subject?
I'm just gonna take off the kid gloves and ask the questions on my mind.
Are Bauer congas prone to cracking?
If so, why?
Edited By BMac on 1202935885