Conical valve sections
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- jtm
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Conical valve sections
Some tubas have valve sections where the size of the tubing increases from one end to the other, to avoid a long stretch of cylindrical tubing when valves are used. Some of these tubas are even well regarded.
Has anyone bothered to do this with euphoniums or flugelhorns? If so, were they good?
Has anyone bothered to do this with euphoniums or flugelhorns? If so, were they good?
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
Re: Conical valve sections
Valve loops will always be cylindrical. You still add a long stretch of straight pipe when you add a valve loop.jtm wrote: ↑Mon Sep 25, 2023 3:39 pm Some tubas have valve sections where the size of the tubing increases from one end to the other, to avoid a long stretch of cylindrical tubing when valves are used. Some of these tubas are even well regarded.
Has anyone bothered to do this with euphoniums or flugelhorns? If so, were they good?
- matt g
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Re: Conical valve sections
There are those weird “TruBore” “Constant Bore” instruments from Couturier that are tapered through the valve tubing, with no adjustment slides, and the valve bore is tapered. But, now the bugle is seeing differing rates of taper which probably causes as many problems as it solves.
Correcting myself…
https://www.rjmartz.com/horns/Couturier_056/
Correcting myself…
https://www.rjmartz.com/horns/Couturier_056/
Dillon/Walters CC (sold)
Meinl-Weston 2165 (sold)
Meinl-Weston 2165 (sold)
- jtm
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Re: Conical valve sections
Yes. Sorry, I should have said “avoid an even longer stretch of cylindrical tubing when multiple valves are used.”
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
Re: Conical valve sections
When you depress the 4th valve alone, you've just added around 5 feet of straight tubing. Straight tubing.
Re: Conical valve sections
That horn sure seems to have a whole lotta straight pipe for a "constant taper" instrument. Perhaps it's a nuance which is beyond me.matt g wrote: ↑Mon Sep 25, 2023 4:03 pm There are those weird “TruBore” “Constant Bore” instruments from Couturier that are tapered through the valve tubing, with no adjustment slides, and the valve bore is tapered. But, now the bugle is seeing differing rates of taper which probably causes as many problems as it solves.
Correcting myself…
https://www.rjmartz.com/horns/Couturier_056/
- jtm
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Re: Conical valve sections
I guess this is my punishment for adding a few words of context for anyone who wandered into this thread without knowing the term “conical valve section”.
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
- LeMark
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Re: Conical valve sections
I bought a miraphone rotor euphonium once, and every valve was a different bore size
Yep, I'm Mark
- jtm
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Re: Conical valve sections
Was it well behaved? Or did that mess up the tuning? Or are rotor euphoniums usually a tuning mess anyway, so you couldn’t tell?
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
Re: Conical valve sections
It wouldn't be the tuning which would be screwed up, but the overall resonance and efficiency because of "early reflections". Not optimal.
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Re: Conical valve sections
Yes, Couturier made a whole line of brass instruments, including a euphonium.
Were they good? Not good enough, I guess.
- LeMark
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Re: Conical valve sections
I thought it was a good euphonium, but the low range stank, ironically enough
This was after I removed the 4th valve for a different project
This was after I removed the 4th valve for a different project
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Yep, I'm Mark