Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
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Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
Hey y’all,
This horn (https://jimlaabsmusicstore.com/store/sc ... er-plated/) seems to be a MW Thor copy (such as Dillon Music’s JZ 5450 and Thomann’s Grand Fifty). Anybody have thoughts/reviews on the specific Schiller version? I’ve seen the JZ horn pop up on the forum a couple of times (I wanna say bloke had one ?), and I believe one is on sale at Baltimore Brass so just curious on info.
Thanks!
This horn (https://jimlaabsmusicstore.com/store/sc ... er-plated/) seems to be a MW Thor copy (such as Dillon Music’s JZ 5450 and Thomann’s Grand Fifty). Anybody have thoughts/reviews on the specific Schiller version? I’ve seen the JZ horn pop up on the forum a couple of times (I wanna say bloke had one ?), and I believe one is on sale at Baltimore Brass so just curious on info.
Thanks!
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Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
Well, the description certainly doesn't match. "4 Monel Pistons-3 Top 1 Side Rotary", when the picture shows 4 front valves and a 5th rotor?
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Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
Unfortunately, Schiller is known for their “off” descriptions such as this horn being “compensating.”
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- matt g (Tue Jan 09, 2024 7:04 pm) • LibraryMark (Tue Jan 09, 2024 7:20 pm)
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Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
Years back, a lot of places selling tubas would call anything with more than 4 valves compensating or semi-compensating. Apparently the words “fully chromatic to the fundamental” hadn’t been invented.
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Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
“European design with big warm sound and outstanding intonation. Vociferous Low End Projection The key to the exceptional sound of the Schiller Elite is in the quality grade of the Brass & Nickel Silver Tubings combined with the engineering that Schiller is well noted for.”
To me, Schiller will forever be best known for the quality of it’s ad copy!
To me, Schiller will forever be best known for the quality of it’s ad copy!
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- Mary Ann (Fri Jul 26, 2024 10:27 am)
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Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
Schiller/Jim Laabs is the worst place to buy a Chinese horn from...no quality control, no customer service, and the notoriously awful descriptions. Better to find the same model by another retailer. They're all the same model from the same factory, after all.
I mostly play the slidey thing.
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Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
I have relatives that live a couple of hours from there.
It's quite a nice town - particularly in the summer.
The son of the namesake is a nice enough (I'm thinking, possibly not ultra-knowledgeable) guy.
If you want the cheapest jimbo, though, you might go there, test, and grab.
He moves a lot of that mess...even though y'all love to not love them...and (me) I wouldn't mess with jimbo...but a bunch of y'all do, and act like it matters where you git it.
I own a FEW Harbor Freight things, so I can't chide anyone for going for jimbo, without being disingenuous.
(Mostly, I buy stuff from there with no moving parts, which sort of limits my selection...but I DO buy their NON-battery calipers.
I drop stuff on the floor A LOT, and those tend to last LONGER than the first time I drop 'em.)
I will say this: I tried THREE times to buy one of these that works:
https://www.harborfreight.com/trigger-s ... 57892.html
They do not/will not. Pony up for the Bernz' 5000.
(remind me of jimbo rotors...but whatev')
It's quite a nice town - particularly in the summer.
The son of the namesake is a nice enough (I'm thinking, possibly not ultra-knowledgeable) guy.
If you want the cheapest jimbo, though, you might go there, test, and grab.
He moves a lot of that mess...even though y'all love to not love them...and (me) I wouldn't mess with jimbo...but a bunch of y'all do, and act like it matters where you git it.
I own a FEW Harbor Freight things, so I can't chide anyone for going for jimbo, without being disingenuous.
(Mostly, I buy stuff from there with no moving parts, which sort of limits my selection...but I DO buy their NON-battery calipers.
I drop stuff on the floor A LOT, and those tend to last LONGER than the first time I drop 'em.)
I will say this: I tried THREE times to buy one of these that works:
https://www.harborfreight.com/trigger-s ... 57892.html
They do not/will not. Pony up for the Bernz' 5000.
(remind me of jimbo rotors...but whatev')
Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
Thanks, but what's your basis? Experience with them, talking to people who have had this experience, or from reading reviews? I'm not trying to defend them, just trying to understand. Thanks!Finetales wrote: ↑Tue Jan 09, 2024 9:26 pm Schiller/Jim Laabs is the worst place to buy a Chinese horn from...no quality control, no customer service, and the notoriously awful descriptions. Better to find the same model by another retailer. They're all the same model from the same factory, after all.
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Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
I haven't played this model. I have a Schiller euphonium that I bought used. I'm thrilled with it. I tend to believe that there are so many of these euphoniums made and sold that they probably have gotten really good at making them. There are so many different tubas they make, I'm guessing there could be a bigger gap between this tuba and the one it copies
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Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
COMPENSATING
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- Mary Ann (Mon Jul 29, 2024 5:36 pm)
Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
Pretty sure this isn't a Jinbao; looks more like it's from ZO, who make a Thor copy. Their factory is in Hengshui.
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Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
Okay. The picture isn't that good. I actually bought one of those ZO things - to which you refer - quite a while back and did some heavy mods to it. (For one thing, the mouthpipe from the factory was comically large.) I still didn't care for it. It's physically bigger than 5450. Also, I really couldn't play it without manipulating both the first and third slides, which (at least with the York style piston setup) is a non-starter for me, and which is why I don't mess with Swiss contrabass tubas, among others
It played okay, but (again) not really good enough for me. I think I played some Rachmaninoff on it with the Memphis Symphony, I'm pretty sure I did a Celtic Woman Christmas concert with it, there's a picture of me playing another show with that instrument, so I guess I may have played a handful of concerts with it. Since the online picture is so funky - and I was looking at it on such a tiny screen here on my phone, I thought it was one of those NOT-Wiseman-9XX sort of old-old pt6P copy things that played so badly out of tune that they (that vendor) seemed to offer for a long time in the past.
Thanks for setting me straight.
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Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
When I looked into buying from them while I was still a newbie, I noted that there is no return policy if you don't like what you get, as there is at the reputable dealers. You can send it back, at your expense, for another one, but you cannot get a refund.Bassman71 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 25, 2024 2:47 pmThanks, but what's your basis? Experience with them, talking to people who have had this experience, or from reading reviews? I'm not trying to defend them, just trying to understand. Thanks!Finetales wrote: ↑Tue Jan 09, 2024 9:26 pm Schiller/Jim Laabs is the worst place to buy a Chinese horn from...no quality control, no customer service, and the notoriously awful descriptions. Better to find the same model by another retailer. They're all the same model from the same factory, after all.
I doubt that has changed. I have recently played one of their BBb tubas and it was not anything I would be even slightly interested in owning. The person who was selling it had the same opinion and was trying to dump it to get something better.
Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
I honked on their Thor copy during a factory visit, and I agree: the intonation was pretty off.
Their Little Thunderbird (copy of a Nirschl 4/4) is a sweet horn though.
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Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
I've played a "handmade" Nirschl, a production Nirschl, a B&S Nirschl (Besson 995), and a Brazil Nirschl.
(more than one of each, but whatever)
The handmade ("hands" down) was the best, but was impossible to play up to pitch (and someone else had already cut the main slide to the quick).
It was brought to me due to the mouthpipe being rotten.
Fortunately, I figured out a way to bend a replacement that was over an inch sorter YET leaving the receiver in precisely the same spot.
(success...a WONDERFUL and great-tuning tuba - though sorta mono-sororous)
(more than one of each, but whatever)
The handmade ("hands" down) was the best, but was impossible to play up to pitch (and someone else had already cut the main slide to the quick).
It was brought to me due to the mouthpipe being rotten.
Fortunately, I figured out a way to bend a replacement that was over an inch sorter YET leaving the receiver in precisely the same spot.
(success...a WONDERFUL and great-tuning tuba - though sorta mono-sororous)
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Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
I've never bought from them personally, because I've heard and read so many bad reviews of the experience. I haven't seen a single "bought a Schiller from Jim Laabs" review that wasn't scathing. Not about the horns themselves, but of the experience buying from Jim Laabs. That's a pretty big gamble when you're buying a horn with no QC that could easily be a dud and you can't get a refund for it.Bassman71 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 25, 2024 2:47 pmThanks, but what's your basis? Experience with them, talking to people who have had this experience, or from reading reviews? I'm not trying to defend them, just trying to understand. Thanks!Finetales wrote: ↑Tue Jan 09, 2024 9:26 pm Schiller/Jim Laabs is the worst place to buy a Chinese horn from...no quality control, no customer service, and the notoriously awful descriptions. Better to find the same model by another retailer. They're all the same model from the same factory, after all.
The Schiller horns themselves can be good depending on the model, like any Chinese horn. I have a Schiller euphonium that I bought used here on the forum and I have no issues with it. I actually replaced a Sterling Virtuoso with it, and though the Sterling was obviously a cool instrument the Schiller is a better player overall.
I mostly play the slidey thing.
Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
I 100% agree. I love my Schiller Euphonium. I also got it used from an excellent local Euphonium player who did a fair amount of upgrades to it. New Yamaha valve springs and caps and had some bore optimization done. It will take a lot of practicing before that horn is holding me back as a musician.Finetales wrote: ↑Sun Jul 28, 2024 9:12 am
The Schiller horns themselves can be good depending on the model, like any Chinese horn. I have a Schiller euphonium that I bought used here on the forum and I have no issues with it. I actually replaced a Sterling Virtuoso with it, and though the Sterling was obviously a cool instrument the Schiller is a better player overall.
As amateur as they come...I know just enough to be dangerous.
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Holton Collegiate Sousas in Eb and BBb
40s York Bell Front Euphonium
Schiller Elite Euphonium
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Meinl-Weston 20
Holton Medium Eb 3+1
Holton Collegiate Sousas in Eb and BBb
40s York Bell Front Euphonium
Schiller Elite Euphonium
Blessing Artist Marching Baritone
Yamaha YSL-352 Trombone
Re: Schiller Studio Elite (“compensating”) CC tuba thoughts?
Years ago I bought one of those Schiller 7b copy bass bones from their ebay store. I went for the nickel plated version because I thought it looked nice and unique. The guy called me on the phone, said they didn't have the nickel version but just the gold brass/bronze version. I said, " that's fine", even though I wanted the nickel finish. They shipped it, complete in the case, wrapped in plastic in perfect condition.
Aside from a different finish I originally wanted, it has been great and I have used it in a college big band as a ringer/guest musician.
It plays very well, and is pretty with the gold brass/bronze bell and nickel-silver slide. The slide is good and smooth; the upper trigger slides were a little rough out of the box. But I've smoothed them out a bit. There was a tiny pinhole leak by the main tuning slide I found and patched soon after testing it. Otherwise, the horn looks and sounds great years later
The rotors, linkage/trigger mechanisms, and valve caps are all smooth and good -- no issues. I bought a couple mouthpieces for the horn that I much prefer over the one supplied.
One guy I know -- who plays at the same place I do -- got one of those much more expensive Shires Q bass bones. He had issues with his rotors sticking just a couple weeks after buying it and had to send it to a shop to remedy it. It is a larger, more "symphonic" bass bone, also with a gold brass bell. I dunno if he'd let me toot on it, but it would be interesting to compare. He chalked up the rotors sticking to "tighter tolerances".
I've not had any issues with my bass bone rotors as of yet.
Aside from a different finish I originally wanted, it has been great and I have used it in a college big band as a ringer/guest musician.
It plays very well, and is pretty with the gold brass/bronze bell and nickel-silver slide. The slide is good and smooth; the upper trigger slides were a little rough out of the box. But I've smoothed them out a bit. There was a tiny pinhole leak by the main tuning slide I found and patched soon after testing it. Otherwise, the horn looks and sounds great years later
The rotors, linkage/trigger mechanisms, and valve caps are all smooth and good -- no issues. I bought a couple mouthpieces for the horn that I much prefer over the one supplied.
One guy I know -- who plays at the same place I do -- got one of those much more expensive Shires Q bass bones. He had issues with his rotors sticking just a couple weeks after buying it and had to send it to a shop to remedy it. It is a larger, more "symphonic" bass bone, also with a gold brass bell. I dunno if he'd let me toot on it, but it would be interesting to compare. He chalked up the rotors sticking to "tighter tolerances".
I've not had any issues with my bass bone rotors as of yet.