Yamaclone F arrived!
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- arpthark
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Yamaclone F arrived!
Welp, with an international money transfer and a ship date of mid-March, I am on the docket for a YFB-621 copy made in .
Same one that @Kontrabasstuba ordered last summer or thereabouts.
The price was very, very good, even with delivery and customs fees, and I trust Herr Ridder's assessment of it. For a cheap F tuba that I am not going to do much with besides play the occasional solo with my brass group, maybe Oktoberfest gigs, it was a no-brainer. (Still playing C tuba on the Gregson concerto with band this fall, I think.)
Already thinking about that Mack Brass 16" aftermarket bell swap, though.
Let's just hope this thing plays down to A=440.
Same one that @Kontrabasstuba ordered last summer or thereabouts.
The price was very, very good, even with delivery and customs fees, and I trust Herr Ridder's assessment of it. For a cheap F tuba that I am not going to do much with besides play the occasional solo with my brass group, maybe Oktoberfest gigs, it was a no-brainer. (Still playing C tuba on the Gregson concerto with band this fall, I think.)
Already thinking about that Mack Brass 16" aftermarket bell swap, though.
Let's just hope this thing plays down to A=440.
Last edited by arpthark on Fri Apr 21, 2023 10:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- the elephant (Thu Feb 02, 2023 8:46 am) • cjk (Thu Feb 02, 2023 12:29 pm) • jonesbrass (Sat Feb 04, 2023 10:51 am)
Blake
Bean Hill Brass
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
IMHO the Gregson sits great on CC. It gives it more of a "heroic" nature. Even though I used an F for much of my senior recital I used a 2145 for the Gregson. If I were to only play the first movement, I might even consider using my huge horn but with a shallower mouthpiece.
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- arpthark (Thu Feb 02, 2023 9:30 am)
- arpthark
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
Agreed. I last played this piece in college 15 years ago (holy moly! I am old now) on C; I agree that it sits very well on C, even after messing around with it on F back in the day.martyneilan wrote: ↑Thu Feb 02, 2023 9:15 amIMHO the Gregson sits great on CC. It gives it more of a "heroic" nature. Even though I used an F for much of my senior recital I used a 2145 for the Gregson. If I were to only play the first movement, I might even consider using my huge horn but with a shallower mouthpiece.
Plus I think it'll be easier to balance against the band with my 4/4 C vs the small Yamaclone.
Blake
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
arpthark wrote: ↑Thu Feb 02, 2023 8:38 am Welp, with an international money transfer and a ship date of mid-March, I am on the docket for a YFB-621 copy made in .
Same one that @Kontrabasstuba ordered last summer or thereabouts.
The price was very, very good, even with delivery and customs fees, and I trust Herr Ridder's assessment of it. For a cheap F tuba that I am not going to do much with besides play the occasional solo with my brass group, maybe Oktoberfest gigs, it was a no-brainer. (Still playing C tuba on the Gregson concerto with band this fall, I think.)
Already thinking about that Mack Brass 16" aftermarket bell swap, though.
Let's just hope this thing plays down to A=440.
I'm sure you will be very happy with the F-Tuba. And all slides are long enough for 440 hz.
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- arpthark (Thu Feb 02, 2023 11:07 am) • the elephant (Thu Feb 02, 2023 12:15 pm) • jonesbrass (Sun Apr 16, 2023 8:58 am)
- bloke
- Mid South Music
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
I hope it's got those groovy black finger buttons. I'm putting some on my B flat bass trombone cimbasso valve section, and they're going to do wonders for it.
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- the elephant (Wed Mar 22, 2023 11:38 am)
- arpthark
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
The pictures I was shown sported no groovy black finger buttons.
But it was considerably less expensive than the ones that sport that option on fleaBay.
(I'm assuming that explains the price difference ... ??)
Blake
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
Shirley.
- the elephant
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
Please, call her Hazel. No one remembers her real name.
Well, you do…
I'm only old enough to remember her character's name: Hazel Burke. (It was "Burke", wasn't it? Crap! I used to know that!)
Well, you do…
I'm only old enough to remember her character's name: Hazel Burke. (It was "Burke", wasn't it? Crap! I used to know that!)
Re: Yamaclone F incoming
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- the elephant (Thu Feb 02, 2023 5:35 pm)
- arpthark
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
Is Humphrey Bogart the YFB-621 of cinema, or a mere clone?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Sacchi
(No relation to one of TubaForum's own.)
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Sacchi
(No relation to one of TubaForum's own.)
Blake
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
Whitney Blake was the best part of that show for me when it was in syndication and I was in 7th grade. What a HOTTIE!
And I am considering getting one of these Chinese F tubas on the web, and also one of the larger bells from Tom to see what I can eke out of it at work. I liked my 621 a lot. But, due to the overly bland (and inflexible) tone "color" I never really *loved* it.
And I am considering getting one of these Chinese F tubas on the web, and also one of the larger bells from Tom to see what I can eke out of it at work. I liked my 621 a lot. But, due to the overly bland (and inflexible) tone "color" I never really *loved* it.
- jonesbrass
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
Interested in your report when it arrives.
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- arpthark (Thu Feb 02, 2023 6:29 pm) • bloke (Thu Feb 02, 2023 6:50 pm)
Willson 3050S CC, Willson 3200S F, B&S PT-10, BMB 6/4 CC, Yamaclone JFF-303
- arpthark
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
Heard something about an air mail mixup involving this tuba over Montana...
Blake
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
I got word that the tuba has been finished and it is being shipped.
We will see how long that takes.
We will see how long that takes.
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- jonesbrass (Wed Mar 22, 2023 6:48 am) • the elephant (Wed Mar 22, 2023 11:46 am)
Blake
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
Cool! Hope it arrives soon and unblemished. . . And that it plays great!
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- arpthark (Wed Mar 22, 2023 6:52 am)
Willson 3050S CC, Willson 3200S F, B&S PT-10, BMB 6/4 CC, Yamaclone JFF-303
- the elephant
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
Everyone knows that those finger buttons add 3 BHP and 5 MPG. You're going to love them. The only real question remaining for Fat Bastard needing serious consideration is whether you will be adding nitrous.
Because—as we all know—bolt-on power is the best power…
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- bloke (Wed Mar 22, 2023 1:15 pm)
- bloke
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- arpthark
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
Got my tracking number. Currently on a slow boat from China with an expected arrival date around April 24.
Blake
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- Rick Denney
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Re: Yamaclone F incoming
I have to confess that I've returned my Yamaha to the usual rotation for quintet stuff, paired with the Bb 184.
I played a 621 with a larger bell at the Army conference this year. It was sitting there so I put a mouthpiece in it and tried it out, close on the heels of playing Eastman's latest F-tuba prototype. I thought a lot of it with the larger bell. A guy walked up and asked me what I thought. Turns out, it was his personal instrument he'd left in that spot while fetching a demo instrument to compare to it.
He forgave me.
I wonder if this Chinese version is 1.) any different from those currently sold with a Yamaha label on them or 2.) any less expensive than what I paid for my Yamaha back in the first year they were available. In those days, the 621 was the affordable alternative when a performer needed an F tuba that played well for a new gig. They lost that affordability pretty quickly, it seems, but fortunately after I bought mine.
As to the 621 as a design concept:
1.) The blandness or inflexibility of the tone for me is a feature, not a bug.
2.) The angle of the valves has never been uncomfortable for me for whatever reason, and mine has gotten, well, LOTS of playing time (it's the only tuba I've owned that earned more in gigs than it cost--and in this case by a very healthy margin).
3.) the Monel valves have been sticky as hell played outdoors in the heat and humidity of San Antonio summertime. I had to lap them a touch, and found that Ali-Syn synthetic oil was the only oil that seem to keep the Monel from developing stiction with the brass casing.
4.) the valves are not vented from the factory. Chuck Daellenbach showed me how they were vented on his C version, and I cut vents into mine in the same spots. But I didn't have a lathe or mill and knew better than to use any sort of drill, so I machined slots instead of holes using a Dremel cut-off tool. That worked perfectly, but I'm still kind of surprised I had the courage (or stupidity) to do that myself. I did think about it quite a bit first.
5.) I've never owned an instrument that stored water in so many creative places.
6.) the brass strap eyelets are soft. I lined mine with nylon wire ties to keep clips from further wearing through those eyelets.
7.) as Lee Hipp once described it during a visit, with the 621 there is a ceiling above which it will not go. When one needs more volume, the only strategy is to use a shallow mouthpiece and go trombone-like.
8.) speaking of going trombone-like, a 621 works very well for bass trombone parts in quintet arrangements scored for two trombones.
9.) but otherwise, a 621 seems to work best with a contrabass tuba mouthpiece, and not a specialist F tuba mouthpiece. This has been the case less since I learned how to play the low register of a B&S, however.
Rick "whose 621 has probably seen its value cut in half because of these clones, but it's okay because it's not for sale" Denney
I played a 621 with a larger bell at the Army conference this year. It was sitting there so I put a mouthpiece in it and tried it out, close on the heels of playing Eastman's latest F-tuba prototype. I thought a lot of it with the larger bell. A guy walked up and asked me what I thought. Turns out, it was his personal instrument he'd left in that spot while fetching a demo instrument to compare to it.
He forgave me.
I wonder if this Chinese version is 1.) any different from those currently sold with a Yamaha label on them or 2.) any less expensive than what I paid for my Yamaha back in the first year they were available. In those days, the 621 was the affordable alternative when a performer needed an F tuba that played well for a new gig. They lost that affordability pretty quickly, it seems, but fortunately after I bought mine.
As to the 621 as a design concept:
1.) The blandness or inflexibility of the tone for me is a feature, not a bug.
2.) The angle of the valves has never been uncomfortable for me for whatever reason, and mine has gotten, well, LOTS of playing time (it's the only tuba I've owned that earned more in gigs than it cost--and in this case by a very healthy margin).
3.) the Monel valves have been sticky as hell played outdoors in the heat and humidity of San Antonio summertime. I had to lap them a touch, and found that Ali-Syn synthetic oil was the only oil that seem to keep the Monel from developing stiction with the brass casing.
4.) the valves are not vented from the factory. Chuck Daellenbach showed me how they were vented on his C version, and I cut vents into mine in the same spots. But I didn't have a lathe or mill and knew better than to use any sort of drill, so I machined slots instead of holes using a Dremel cut-off tool. That worked perfectly, but I'm still kind of surprised I had the courage (or stupidity) to do that myself. I did think about it quite a bit first.
5.) I've never owned an instrument that stored water in so many creative places.
6.) the brass strap eyelets are soft. I lined mine with nylon wire ties to keep clips from further wearing through those eyelets.
7.) as Lee Hipp once described it during a visit, with the 621 there is a ceiling above which it will not go. When one needs more volume, the only strategy is to use a shallow mouthpiece and go trombone-like.
8.) speaking of going trombone-like, a 621 works very well for bass trombone parts in quintet arrangements scored for two trombones.
9.) but otherwise, a 621 seems to work best with a contrabass tuba mouthpiece, and not a specialist F tuba mouthpiece. This has been the case less since I learned how to play the low register of a B&S, however.
Rick "whose 621 has probably seen its value cut in half because of these clones, but it's okay because it's not for sale" Denney
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