In my head, here is the plan for all this:
I will be putting together one donor carcass that will be a bell-front model 350. These parts are currently with Keith Polito for assembly and dent work. I am not going too deep into this one as far as cosmetics go. It will be stripped of lacquer, properly put together, and dents removed to the best of the magnet's ability. I told Keith I'm not worried about the bow caps being totally dent free. This 350 will be a functional (huge) hopefully great-playing bell front tuba.
Once the 350 body is done, I will take it back here, and it will sit for a while, valveless.
The 340>345:
The big project. The reason I jumped on these parts. I will be pulling the valve section from this tuba, and transferring it to the bell-front tuba. That cannot happen until the 4 valve set is rebuilt. Unfortunately, they all have side to side play in the casings. This is also NOT a stock 345 4 piston set. Martin Wilk put it together. Keith looked at it and told me that he believes it's worth rebuilding, so I've contacted Mr. Oberloh for a cost and time estimate. Luckily, no slides are soldered to this valve set, so getting it to Seattle when I'm ready will be easy.
Mr. Wilk used a 3rd valve as the (now) 4th valve. From what I can tell, it's pretty similar to the porting of a standard 4th valve, so things should be pretty straightforward as far as getting the valve circuits made. This lot contained slides 1-3 that are already mostly together, and I have them laid out like that in one of the photos. It's missing a few little bits to finish the 3rd circuit, but as of right now I'm not really concerned about it. It also contains a bunch of extra tubing to make the 4th circuit. Routing that will probably be a process, but Keith knows these horns really well and has 4 Holton valvesets to compare things with.
Interestingly, in Holton fashion, between three 3-valve sets and two 4-valve sets, NONE are the same. Crooks are different widths, slides are different lengths, and porting is slightly different between all of these. Typical Holton. GAAAAAH!
![Gaah :gaah:](./images/smilies/e21589.gif)
Once the 345 project gets off the ground, I'd like my nice 345 body to be mostly dent free, and done the right way. Pulled apart, re-soldered better than new, and all rounded out again. I don't know about the finish choice yet. It will either be spotty lacquer or raw brass. I'm leaning towards raw brass, to be honest with you.
When all is said and done, I will have TWO big Holtons. One 345, with nice rebuilt valves, and one 350 with my (really nice) 340 valveset on it. This should be really fun.
Here are some pictures. For those curious, I paid $1,500 for all these parts. I felt like that was a screaming deal considering the price of 4 valve .750 piston sets, if you can even find one. I did NOT budget for a valve job, so, this may have to sit for a while. I will see what estimates I can get and go from there.
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One of these carcasses is mine for the 350. I gave Keith the other in exchange for sticking the 350 body together and doing some dent work.
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The size of that bell is ridiculous! This will be a fun tuba...
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Planning out the valve circuits in my head.
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Pistons 1-4. Notice, 4 looks to have been plated at some point in it's life.
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Red rot in the 4th valve. Ugh.
![Facepalm2 :facepalm2:](./images/smilies/facepalm32.gif)
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Wilk-built casings. Keith was very complimentary of the work. He said it was done well and looks clean. Worth rebuilding.
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Other side of the casings.
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Play in the valves. Boooooo.