Due to my love for the 6th valve that I added to my F tuba, and the way of thinking about its utility ($1 to @bloke) that caused me to want to add it in the first place, I have had one of those "Why not?" moments with my Holton.
There is barely room for it, and setting up a logial linkage system will take some head scratching to work out, but I am ready to do this interesting modification. The valve and its slide circuit have been built. I have a very good connection system to the bugle that will allow me to remove the 5th/6th valve system altogether when I do not need it, and if I want to spend the money on the needed components I can even make a completely new 5th valve section as I have now, so that I can have an easily changeable 4/5/6-valved BAT.
When you add in that proviso so often used in this community ("for such a large horn") this horn plays very, very well. It plays quite well for a tuba of any size, to be honest. However, the low range still has those compromises that all tubas have, but that additional valves help to correct. The two main reasons I want this are 1.) low E 245 is pretty sharp, whereas 234 is quite flat. Neither use 1st so a slide pull would be a little less convenient, though it has always been doable. Also, the one truly out of tune pitch is the Eb below the staff, which is very sharp if 2 and 3 are set to make Ab be in tune across the range. Other true 6th valve uses would be 2456 for Eb, 12456 for D, 23456 for Db, and 123456 as a pedal C substitute.
Is it worth the added weight? Honestly, I don't know. My Kurath is approaching riduculousness with it's weight and how my design makes the horn more top-heavy. This horn is already very heavy, but I have started using a tuba rest, so things with the Kurath have become quite acceptable now. I tried the Holton with the rest for a few hours over the last two days and I like it quite a bit, now that I have the bugs worked out in my setup and trust the rest with this much weight.
So before I work to install this 6th valve (which, again is of a modular design) I need to consider that I have to pay off a large bill, and need to sell a horn relatively quickly. It is easily a $12,000 tuba now. It is actually better than a lot of the high-zoot Yorkophones that I played before I bought my YamaYork. However, being a raw brass "Frankentuba" (an unknown quantity until you play it) I know it will never draw a buyer at the price it is worth, so I think that $12,000 is a more than fair price for a very serious player who wants this type of sound with this level of user friendliness.
I put it up for sale a while back but decided that I was not really prepared to part with it; I love playing it too much. (I think I like it more than my excellent YamaYork, but I do not think I could get my purchase price back on it for a long time, seeing how I am absolutely against shipping tubas of any value, ever, in to or out of my State. Getting the thirty grand back would not be an issue for anyone who has played these expensive and somewhat inconsistent tubas, as this one is a truly outstanding example. The issue is that that price point is aimed at a very specific and small demographic, thus very little chance for a sale in a reasonable amount of time. I am also unwilling to part with it unless the player is already in a full-time gig and is known as someone who does not accidentally back their Tahoe over their tuba in a parking lot. So with that and my price it is not going to be up for sale anytime soon, if ever.
That means that the Holton has to be the one, because at $12K it is an approachable purchase for a much larger pool of players. Time will eventually become an issue for my medical debt repayment, so that means the YamaYork loses this race; I'm keeping it. Unless I find some hitherto unknown cache of $$$$ to pay off some major medical expenses my Holton has to be my sacrificial fiscal lamb because I feel it would sell faster. I also do not need thirty grand.
That beings me to my question: Would a well-designed and neatly-installed 6th valve move the Holton from Outstanding Frankentuba into the sphere of things too weird to sell? If I decide to again try and sell the Holton — seriously, this time — would the 6th valve be an asset or a liability?
My thought is that if I leave the current removable 6th section alone and build out a combined removable 5th/6th section so that the player could swap between the two, would that become something like a selling "feature"?
I am going to do this exact thing because my current 5th setup works so well and I want to be able to easily revert to it if I dislike the added 6th valve. If a 6th valve is not an asset for a possible sale I could sell with the currnet 5th valve and keep the 5th/6th section to use the parts in other projects. I guess that means that my question actually would be whether it would be more attractive to include the 5th-only section or the 5th/6th section as a part of any sales ad copy. For an additional grand I could include both.
I, in my tiny, reptillian, smooth-brained mind, think it is a great idea and a huge asset to such an instrument (a thoroughly cleaned-up low register for a horn most folks would want specifically for low material) but I remember some unfavorable comments from a few of you back when I originally floated this idea a few years ago.
Heck, I don't want to sell the beast at all, but I have been in the hospital a lot the last two years, and I only see this becoming more common as I age. I need to clear those accounts so the docs will keep treating me when needed. I am a heart patient and a diabetic so neither situation will ever go away, though I have shown some great progress in both cases. I am just visualizing cancer or some other hideously expensive malady, and me having to go into bankruptcy or sell horns for givaway prices to stay out of financial trouble. I want to zero out all the balances ASAP for this reason.
So, if you are still reading this tome, what say you? Sell the horn as is (4+1) or sell it as a six-banger (4+2 or 4+1+1)? Or maybe include both options for more $$$$$?
Any feedback will receive the time and consideration it deserves. Thanks very much for reading…
Wade
