Could be worse, it's got to be like 50 or 60 each way to Yellowknife for you to get that PT-6.
ID CL: 184 CC
- cjk
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Re: ID CL: 184 CC
True, but I don't have any desire to own one of those.
- bloke
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Re: ID CL: 184 CC
I've driven straight through from Memphis to places like "podunk" Montana and Denver, Colorado (more than once each).
I already drive straight through to places like Pittsburgh, DC, and NYC/Philly.
I've also driven straight HOME from Salt Lake City.
I don't like sleeping in nasty motels, and I don't like spending super-high-$$$ dough on might-not-be-nasty-but-probably-are hotels.
I already drive straight through to places like Pittsburgh, DC, and NYC/Philly.
I've also driven straight HOME from Salt Lake City.
I don't like sleeping in nasty motels, and I don't like spending super-high-$$$ dough on might-not-be-nasty-but-probably-are hotels.
- Mary Ann
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Re: ID CL: 184 CC
You probably weren't around in the days when I had one like this --- including long 5th. It was in fine shape mechanically, had vented valves. I had a major health event and sold most of my instruments under the assumption that I clearly was not going to recover. Wish I still had that one, but I also wish I still had the NStar which I sold a few years ago under the same assumption. I seem to be good at recovering but it takes me years and years and the tubas say bye-bye during that time.
Whoever brought up valves, yeah that is definitely a question to ask, and I am clueless how one would figure that out over Zoom if the seller were less than clear about it.
- Mary Ann
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Re: ID CL: 184 CC
So if I have him pull valve slides over zoom, should I be able to hear whether the valves are tight? My (french) horn is decades old and there is still a quite discernible POP if I pull a valve slide quickly without depressing the valve. I don't know how accurate that is for determining whether the valves are good or not, and a tuba is not going to pop like a horn does.
- jtm
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Re: ID CL: 184 CC
My 57 year old 186 that survived an Arizona public school has rotors that still pop. Well, a deep thump, anyway. That's certainly a fair expectation.
The rotors on the 188 don't do that, but it's vented.
The rotors on the 188 don't do that, but it's vented.
John Morris
This practicing trick actually seems to be working!
playing some old German rotary tubas for free
This practicing trick actually seems to be working!
playing some old German rotary tubas for free
- Tubajug
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Re: ID CL: 184 CC
I believe a 184 would have a 14" bell. The 186 has a 16" bell (older vintages anyway).
Jordan
King 2341 with Holton Monster Eb Bell
King/Conn Eb Frankentuba
Pan AmeriConn BBb Helicon
Yamaha YBB-103
"No one else is placed exactly as we are in our opportune human orbits."
King 2341 with Holton Monster Eb Bell
King/Conn Eb Frankentuba
Pan AmeriConn BBb Helicon
Yamaha YBB-103
"No one else is placed exactly as we are in our opportune human orbits."
- Mary Ann
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Re: ID CL: 184 CC
ah, zoom happened today. It looks in fine shape but the fifth valve is left hand operated, which makes me a bit unsure. On the tuner, the in-staff E was flat as usual, but he had his 3rd slide set so it was in tune, which is likely what I would do. This isn't a cheap enterprise and I'm asking for "thoughts" about it, not knowing if it really WOULD be more usable in some scenarios than my current Eb, which has an amazingly open and playable low range, if I do still struggle a bit with the low Bb if I'm not blasting. (Blasting, it works fine.) He is a college student, has had this tuba for about four years, and switched to a 1291 because he needed something bigger. All understandable and I'm convinced this is a legit attempt at a sale. But he's had it on Craigslist for a year! I'm guessing that the price is more than people want to pay, or it would have disappeared by now.
- matt g
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Re: ID CL: 184 CC
The 184 is not en vogue. There are a few people here extolling the virtues of this tuba, but out in reality, newer designs are more popular for “expensive” buys and Chinese tubas are far less money for “cheap” buys.
Understood with the hesitation on the left hand 5th. I’d probably eventually have it switched. That being said, if there is minimal slide pulling needed, it’s probably not a huge issue.
Understood with the hesitation on the left hand 5th. I’d probably eventually have it switched. That being said, if there is minimal slide pulling needed, it’s probably not a huge issue.
Dillon/Walters CC (sold)
Meinl-Weston 2165 (sold)
Meinl-Weston 2165 (sold)
- Mary Ann
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Re: ID CL: 184 CC
On my previous 184, also with 5th = 2+3, it was right thumb operated. I used it in the octave above the pedal octave for single-valve notes that otherwise would have been 2+3 (Ab and Eb) and had it tuned for that. I didn't do a lot in the lowest octave at that time, and may not have the air for it now either on a CC. I thought about a Mack 410 but there is someone locally about my size (bigger even) who has one and she struggles with its size and weight. So I figure I would too. But even the 184 is going to be heavier than what I've got, longer bugle and one more valve. So I hesitate. I really do not know what would be a reasonable price to offer, and am looking for input on that. Could be he has been told he cannot budge on the price, because likely it was purchased by his parents who have now sprung for a bigger CC and likely want their investment back.
Re: ID CL: 184 CC
I'm one of those extolling the virtues of my 184. I don't care about "big" anymore, and it's a crazy flexible horn.matt g wrote: ↑Sat Oct 15, 2022 12:19 pm The 184 is not en vogue. There are a few people here extolling the virtues of this tuba, but out in reality, newer designs are more popular for “expensive” buys and Chinese tubas are far less money for “cheap” buys.
Understood with the hesitation on the left hand 5th. I’d probably eventually have it switched. That being said, if there is minimal slide pulling needed, it’s probably not a huge issue.
The intonation on mine, with the right mouthpiece, is great. With the wrong mouthpiece, it's awful. With my Olka CB1 and my TU-28, I only need to finagle the C#, D, Eb, and E in the staff. That does present an issue in some of the Snedecor etudes, for example, where I go from that mid-range down into the pedals, so my left hand has to go from working the first valve slide to working the fifth valve. It's a tradeoff I'm willing to deal with because I love the horn, and with one or two practice runs, I can get my choreography down. I've never loved having #5 on my right thumb, so it doesn't feel like a tradeoff, just a different issue to deal with and one I'd rather deal with.
I get that I'm weird for opting for a horn with a lot of tradeoffs instead of a point-and-shoot, but the sound and flexibility is SO GOOD I can't put it down. And no one pays me to play anymore. So "can't put it down" is my primary factor.
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- York-aholic (Tue Oct 18, 2022 4:00 pm)
Re: ID CL: 184 CC
My guess is that the two primary issues buyers have with the 184 in question are the size and the price. Everybody, it seems, want bigger horns at a lower price point. I'm not saying those are valid objections, just my guess.
Re: ID CL: 184 CC
I didn't buy mine at that price, and I don't know if I would even have sought my wife's blessing (permission?) to do so.
- bloke
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Re: ID CL: 184 CC
TOPIC: hard cases and small cars
I had been driving a 2002 Toyota Corolla.
(It would not quit running well, so I've loaned it to a colleague.)
A Walt Johnson 6/4 fiberglass case will fit in the back seat of that car.
I have to believe that Camrys (as well as later-model Corollas) are larger, and that 184 hard cases are smaller.
I had been driving a 2002 Toyota Corolla.
(It would not quit running well, so I've loaned it to a colleague.)
A Walt Johnson 6/4 fiberglass case will fit in the back seat of that car.
I have to believe that Camrys (as well as later-model Corollas) are larger, and that 184 hard cases are smaller.
Re: ID CL: 184 CC
Expanding on this - I got a PT6 in its hard case into the back of a 2-door Civic a few times.bloke wrote: ↑Thu Oct 20, 2022 12:22 pm TOPIC: hard cases and small cars
I had been driving a 2002 Toyota Corolla.
(It would not quit running well, so I've loaned it to a colleague.)
A Walt Johnson 6/4 fiberglass case will fit in the back seat of that car.
I have to believe that Camrys (as well as later-model Corollas) are larger, and that 184 hard cases are smaller.
- jtm
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Re: ID CL: 184 CC
hatchback?
John Morris
This practicing trick actually seems to be working!
playing some old German rotary tubas for free
This practicing trick actually seems to be working!
playing some old German rotary tubas for free