There is no spit valve on the Alto Saxophone. There is a spit valve on most Bari Saxophones and Contrabass Saxophones. To remove spit the easiest way is to breath in with your mouth on the mouthpiece as hard as you can. This seems a little unsanitary, but it is the most efficient way, because certain times you will not have more than half a second of a break, and if you have a spittish-tone, you will want to try to get the spit out from inside your mouthpiece.
To get the spit and condensation out of the French Horn slide each valve out of their position in the horn and shake the contents out. Then turn the french horn around until all the water has come out. Then put each valve back in the correct place. For the key valves hold down each key while taking each valve out. That is how you get the "spit" out of a French Horn.
It actually comes out the spit valve located on the pipe under the bell
to empty the one on the main tuning slide, just hold the lever, or push the button, depending on the kind of spit valve you have, and blow air into the trumpet. To empty the one on the third valve slide press all three valves down, and push the lever/button on the spit valve, and blow air.
To drain the spit from a french horn, make sure the mouthpiece is NOT connected, then flip the horn so that the bell is facing to your bottom right, and the mouthpiece slot is facing your bottom left. From there, remove the tuning slide from the instrument. Then simply flick the slide to remove the spit from it, and reinsert it to your horn. If this does not work, you spit is probably in one of your valve slides. Follow the same process from above, except turn it so your valves are pointing upward, and their slides downward. Then empty each one in turn in the way mentioned above, until the spit is located.
the alto flute
on the main tunning slide and third valve slide there should be a spit valve, its used to empty your spit from the instrument. some trumpets have more then the two common spit valves.
To get the spit and condensation out of the French Horn slide each valve out of their position in the horn and shake the contents out. Then turn the french horn around until all the water has come out. Then put each valve back in the correct place. For the key valves hold down each key while taking each valve out. That is how you get the "spit" out of a French Horn.
A spit valve.
It actually comes out the spit valve located on the pipe under the bell
To clean the spit valve of a clarinet, you can gently remove it from the instrument. Use a small brush or pipe cleaner to clean inside the valve and its housing. Wipe down the valve with a clean cloth and allow it to fully dry before reattaching it to the clarinet.
You can, but it doesn't work as well or as long as valve oil.
They are both used to play the flute
YES you can my instructor and i have a silver trumpet and we use valve oil if you don't have oil use saliva {spit}
to empty the one on the main tuning slide, just hold the lever, or push the button, depending on the kind of spit valve you have, and blow air into the trumpet. To empty the one on the third valve slide press all three valves down, and push the lever/button on the spit valve, and blow air.
Maintaining a flute isn't that difficult. Listed below are the things that should to keep your flute in good shape: 1. When you are done playing, clean out your flute with a thin rag that is about 10 inches by 10 inches. The rag should be fairly thin, but durable (a little bit thicker than a paper towel). In your flute case, there should be a rod that is metal or plastic that is about the width of a pencil. Thread the rag through the hole at the top of the rod and twist the rag around the rod. Then, push the rag/rod into each piece of your flute seperately and pull it out the other end. This will clean all of the spit out of the flute, which may help produce a better sound. 2. Do not leave your flute in the cold! First of all, this can make your flute out of tune. Also, the spit inside of your flute can freeze, which is bad for the instrument. 3. Tune your flute using a tuner. If the tuner says that your flute is sharp, push in your mouthpiece until it is in tune. If your flute is flat, pull out your mouth piece until it is in tune. 4. When your keys are sticky, take a piece of thin paper and stick it into the key when it is open. Then, push down on the key while pulling the thin paper out. This will remove a lot of the "sticky stuff", so your keys will move quickly. I hope that this was helpful!
For what car you ask for? If it is in japanese car. Toyota Mostly check the purge valve. For Nissan, check the the vent control valve( which i am pretty sure it is) because my car has the same problem. The serve Engine light should be on if your car spit out gas. But there are other problem could cause this too. Line broken and so on. Take it to dealer they will change the part for you. But for nissan sentra i am sure it is the vent control valve. take it out and spit some WD 40 in there. leave it for a while put it on go clean the code
It could be a bad PCV valve. The PCV valve sits in the top of the valve cover and opens and closed to allow the engine to ventilate properly. If it is stuck closed the engine will not vent properly.