...I've put way more "weight" (importance) on the vibration of the column of air that I have on the dynamics of air flow...and I still do:
- When blowing into a brass instrument - particularly a huge tuba - we are nearly completely closing our mouths down in order to cause our lips to vibrate at particularly frequencies - which set off enharmonic frequencies within the adjacent air column of the brass instrument (and you needn't pick at in imprecision in this statement, unless you absolutely feel the need).
- Particularly with a tuba, the small amount of air (which we're allowing to past between our lips) just isn't very much air - once that air reaches the bell (due to the huge bore, and the CFM's being so diffused (and go ahead and pick at this if you care to, but it's not my main point).
This (below) is what got me MORE thinking about "air flow":
Last night, I sat in on a band rehearsal (a band which is attracting more-and-more good players, which makes it more-and-more enjoyable for me to sit in) which I often do on Mondays, because those rehearsals are the same time as a Monday meeting that Mrs. bloke attends monthly. As has happened before (even though there are competent/faithful regular tuba players enrolled) I was the ONLY tuba, and - due to that - was actually applauded

They ran through a full (not watered-down) transcription of the (first) Superman movie "Main Title".
(Interestingly - OR NOT, I was probably the first-ever person to play/record that band transcription, and actually recorded it for one of those cassettes or old "sound sheets" mailed out to band directors by Warner Bros. ...I'm thinking that I actually recorded that - possibly even before the movie had quite been released...?? I recorded it - with some other faculty and students - at the University of Kansas in the fall of 1978, I'm thinking. We also recorded grades 2/3/4/5 versions of that and other pieces from the movie. )
ANYWAY...
I've played that "Main Title" thingie (busy tuba part) MANY times with a C tuba...but (as I've discussed relentlessly) I'm playing B-flat tubas, now...
...I typically play C below the bass clef staff with 1-3 (with the #1 slide pulled just about out to the slide stop, but not quite).
Playing those C's over-and-over forcefully, and with many re-articulations, I felt that slide "jump" under my fingers (of course, it's extraordinarily well-aligned, yet not loose...After all: It's my tuba...) every time I played one of those C's. The slide was trying to be BLOWN OUT farther, each time...
...so there certain IS something to the "air flow" thing, obviously - at least towards the small end of a tuba.



I guess I NOTICED the phenomenon, because...
- The #1 slide floats so nicely on this tuba.
- I've probably never played THAT MANY continuous and LOUD C's below the staff ever before on a B-flat tuba (whereby the pitch, "C", involves using the 1st valve (rather than "no valves down", as with a C tuba).
note:
I'm NOT attempting to set up an argumentative/debate type of thread (as I don't know very much about these sorts of things), but I am posting to ADMIT that there's more (and more to) "compressed" and "strong" (to use very non-scientific terms) air (again - at least, in the small end of even a VERY LARGE tuba) than that of which I was previously aware...
...but had my #1 slide alignment and fit been mediocre (or free-moving based on a loose fit, rather than being precisely fit) I still may have never noticed this phenomenon.
Just as a parenthetical post script...
The tuba (mentioned repeatedly above) does NOT belong in a museum/collection.
Further..
If (??) I'm hoarding B-flat tubas - so far all I have are this one, a stubby one that I built out of surplus junk, a half-completed/"just"playable Besson compensating/recording bell, and an extremely distressed old 14K sousaphone body waiting to be straightened out enough to receive a nicely-rebuilt Conn 36K valveset...(even though I would PREFER a King sousaphone)...and NONE of these (for the record) belong in a collection/museum, either.