brass instrument finish aesthetics

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Casca Grossa
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by Casca Grossa »

Everyone knows the best tubas have multiple finishes to imporve sound and intonation. Let's not forget it must have a lot of saturn water keys too. Nickel silver inner and outer slides, red brass leadpipe, silver plated bell, raw brass bugle, etc. Throw in an AGR, heavyweight mouthpiece, a tone ring in the bell, drop your mouthpiece on the fifth valve slide, and freeze the sucker at absolute zero for about an hour. That's the makings of the greatest tuba ever made.
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the elephant (Tue Nov 22, 2022 12:33 pm) • arpthark (Tue Nov 22, 2022 12:36 pm) • bloke (Tue Nov 22, 2022 12:47 pm) • Yorkboy (Sun Nov 27, 2022 8:05 am)


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bloke
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by bloke »

Those are all great tacks/tactics for fixer-peeps who can't really fix.
tone ring:
I was given one of those for a 2165. The (tremendous) weight nor mass didn't do anything, but choking down the (Holton-345-ish) SHAPE of the bell throat (to a smaller SHAPE) did something.
It would have been better (weight-wise) had it been made of some sort of plastic.
I put it in place with two-sided tape, just in case I (or a future owner) wanted to go back to trying it without that thing.
Casca Grossa wrote: Tue Nov 22, 2022 11:41 am Everyone knows the best tubas have multiple finishes to imporve sound and intonation. Let's not forget it must have a lot of saturn water keys too. Nickel silver inner and outer slides, red brass leadpipe, silver plated bell, raw brass bugle, etc. Throw in an AGR, heavyweight mouthpiece, a tone ring in the bell, drop your mouthpiece on the fifth valve slide, and freeze the sucker at absolute zero for about an hour. That's the makings of the greatest tuba ever made.
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Casca Grossa (Tue Nov 22, 2022 10:54 pm)
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UncleBeer
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by UncleBeer »

Bloke, I happen to know that Ferree's will hook you up with a rattle can of "Eastlake Orange", which is the finish which all the hipsters prefer. :teeth:
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bloke
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by bloke »

UncleBeer wrote: Tue Nov 22, 2022 1:12 pm Bloke, I happen to know that Ferree's will hook you up with a rattle can of "Eastlake Orange", which is the finish which all the hipsters prefer. :teeth:
My bass trombone cimbasso thing will feature a $150 King front-action baritone 4-valve valveset, so that seems compatible but - if I spray that on my salvaged late-1980's Yamaha $50 bass trombone bell section - won't the incompatibility issues cause intonation and response problems?
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by jtm »

cjk wrote: Tue Nov 22, 2022 9:05 am This thread is awful wordy for "lacquer vs silver".
If you simplify things too much, they'll have to start arguing about gold brass vs. yellow brass.
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by cjk »

jtm wrote: Tue Nov 22, 2022 4:56 pm
cjk wrote: Tue Nov 22, 2022 9:05 am This thread is awful wordy for "lacquer vs silver".
If you simplify things too much, they'll have to start arguing about gold brass vs. yellow brass.
Only trombone players are THAT simple!! :smilie2:
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by groovlow »

Let's not forget everybody's favorite finish...NOT
50% blotchy!! lacquer and brass :laugh:
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by Beyond16 »

Casca Grossa wrote: Tue Nov 22, 2022 11:41 am Everyone knows the best tubas have multiple finishes to imporve sound and intonation. Let's not forget it must have a lot of saturn water keys too. Nickel silver inner and outer slides, red brass leadpipe, silver plated bell, raw brass bugle, etc. Throw in an AGR, heavyweight mouthpiece, a tone ring in the bell, drop your mouthpiece on the fifth valve slide, and freeze the sucker at absolute zero for about an hour. That's the makings of the greatest tuba ever made.
Sounds like talk on the trumpet forums. I quit hanging around there after reading the importance of water key pivot torque. Also don't forget to clock your mouthpiece (mark the best sounding position and install it with that rotation every time).
I read over there about the importance of harmonic balancers. Well worth the money evidently, for trumpets as well as V8s.
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Casca Grossa (Sun Nov 27, 2022 3:43 pm)
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by arpthark »

The sound of a tuba player who installs MAW valves, Saturn water keys, tone ring, magic dent, strips the bell lacquer, PVAK kit, fancy finger buttons, and heavyweight bottom valve caps:

tooooot
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by bloke »

arpthark wrote: Fri Nov 25, 2022 8:50 pm The sound of a tuba player who installs MAW valves, Saturn water keys, tone ring, magic dent, strips the bell lacquer, PVAK kit, fancy finger buttons, and heavyweight bottom valve caps:

tooooot

I was able to trade some repair work for a set of (the size that fit King) MAW pistons.

The oem pistons (King valveset that I heavily altered for my Holton project B-flat tuba) were not really "worn", but they weren't "professional-tuba tolerances close", either.
The MAW 4-piston set arrived and (just as I had hoped) didn't drop into the King casings.
By the time I fit the not-worn/possibly-barely-oversized MAW pistons to the (25-year-old-but-not-60-year-old) King valve casings, I ended up with really excellent valve tolerances, and without sending the valveset off for a (now: no longer affordably-priced) complete rebuild job.
I like the fact that those pistons (particularly the large M-W/B&S-fitting ones) weigh less. I'm not sure that the weight difference (if any - in the smaller King ones) makes much difference.

light-touch valves: (however this is accomplished)
I find that I play differently when I'm not having to work hard (and not even aware of doing it) to depress pistons or rotor levers.

tone ring:
too heavy, but shrinking the bell throat shape/diameter of a 2165 (Holton 345-shaped) bell put more clarity/"teeth" in the sonority.
(yeah...I already mentioned this earlier) A better way to accomplish this would be to fabricate the same thing of lightweight plastic and (so as to be reversible) double-sided tape it in place (which is what I used to hold that heavy brass tone ring in place).
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by Mary Ann »

Can plastic pistons be made to work "as well as metal?" For me it's the length of the throw more than the weight, but I'm curious.
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by bloke »

Mary Ann wrote: Thu Dec 01, 2022 9:54 am Can plastic pistons be made to work "as well as metal?" For me it's the length of the throw more than the weight, but I'm curious.
They would change too much in shape with temperature changes.
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by kingrob76 »

were I to pick a finish out of thin air for my horns I would pick this every time:

Image
Image
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by hrender »

Image

Minus the dust.
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by arpthark »

hrender wrote: Thu Dec 01, 2022 5:02 pm Image

Minus the dust.
With a bit of work it could be used as a large-scale mock up in dental school or for ENT doctors in training. Just add some incisors and a big uvula and you're all set.
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by York-aholic »

kingrob76 wrote: Thu Dec 01, 2022 3:31 pm Image
That’s some serious tooling in the background.
Some old Yorks, Martins, and perhaps a King rotary valved CC
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by bloke »

Other than the dust, I like the King.

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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by matt g »

kingrob76 wrote: Thu Dec 01, 2022 3:31 pm were I to pick a finish out of thin air for my horns I would pick this every time:

Image
Image
That Rudy looks to be made of gold brass in the leadpipe and valve tubing, with nickel silver ferrules and whatnot. Than yellow brass for the bows and bell. Seems pretty smart.
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by bloke »

Something about RM bells' manufacturing processes (and/or allow...but - more likely - manufacturing processes) makes them (at least: older ones) very problematic regarding removing creases. It's almost as if they were "PRE-work-hardened".

The 5/4 that I owned and later sold is a fine instrument, but the bell was pretty beaten up when I received it, and I had to use completely different types of techniques to smooth it out to my familiar-to-some-people standards.

I don't know if RM is still using the COMBO T-joint and link type of linkage as shown in that picture, but my (older) instrument originally featured that, and I removed the T-joints and replaced them with a stabilized link (attaching the action arms to the levers). I'm only wondering (??) when the pictured instrument was manufactured. My instrument was completely fabricated of yellow brass.
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Re: brass instrument finish aesthetics

Post by kingrob76 »

I believe these are two different instruments, as the first one does not appear to have a gold brass valve section. The second photo is from May 14 of this year and came from their Facebook page, for what it's worth.
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