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Started by buckfever1613, March 06, 2012, 10:52:33 AM
Quote from: TauntoHawk on March 06, 2012, 02:01:07 PMSlate: Slate is a great surface and is one of the more popular surfaces. It is very easy to use and maintains extremely well, simply clean it off with a green scotch brite pad and keep the striker clean and you will be running yelps and clucks in no time. Slate usually is a softer tone and is great for lighter non aggressive calling with good role over and clean yelps and clucks. Slate doesn't take to moisture very well and is virtually useless on a rainy day. Glass/Crystal is slightly different in composition but close enough to be included here together. Crystal has a higher lead content which makes it a bit softer than traditional glass. Glass/Crystal has a higher pitched front end that can be extremely loud and ear piercing depending how the call is built it finish high and clear or break into extremely edgy rasp. Glass can be tougher to perform maintenance and conditioning on for the newbie caller but is not difficult. I use a stone going only in one direction to get base down and finish it in the field and from time to time with 100 or 110 sand paper. Aluminum finishes out the top 3 most popular surfaces. Most custom call makers choose to use an anodized aluminum which requires very little maintenance. Personally I find aluminum to be the most versatile surface at being able to go from loud to soft and clear to raspy as well as all-weather performance with the right striker. Anodized aluminum requires no sanding just wipe it with an alcohol pad from time to time which make it a very field friendly surface. Copper is a little more rare but is popular with many here on the site because it offers a unique sound quality that the other surfaces don't have. It has a metallic edge to the rasp it produces that can work when everything else doesn't. It takes a bit more care being a softer metal and needs a good sanding. It also seems to like less striker pressure than other surfaces and squeaks out if you try and put too much into it. Ceramic is another surface that can sound awesome and somewhat combines attributes from slate and an anodized aluminum. It can be conditioned with a light sanding stone and maintained with a scotch brite. It produces the realistic cluck and purr of slate while being able to reach a little higher on the front end of a yelp like aluminum. Most guys like to start by trying one of each main surface type seeing what they like and going from there because the combination of surface, soundboard, and pot material is endless. Collecting, practicing, making calls is huge part of the fun in the turkey game like a hobby that links into a sport. As far as a newbie trying to figure out where to start or the one call surface to buy leading into a season. Everyone has their favorite and opinion but I like anodized aluminum.