Re: Observations — YamaYork and Adams F
Posted: Tue Apr 16, 2024 10:27 am
Mr. Jacobs had the throat drilled out a bit on the mouthpiece that was copied. Apparently, sometime after the original CB mouthpiece was made, Warburton found another example that had not been altered, and that is the TG2. I think the 3 and 4 are versions of the smaller one that was sent to Kelly and later caused the big stink over these pieces. (I neither know nor care about those.)
The "TG" in the name is a joke, standing for "The Grail".
The inner rim bite is quite sharp, and the rim is very flat. The cup is as deep as Hermione Granger's purse. The throat is too drilled out for my lungs; I can feel just about zero resistance compared to a Conn Helleberg 120. I think you could drive a Trabant through this thing!
In truth, it looks like a Doug Elliott "T" cup with the largest shank that he used to offer, a "T8A+" — only larger. I suspect that the original (Warburton's "TG2" with the tighter throat) might be more to my liking. Maybe not. But the sharp rim is not to my liking as it wears me out!
The leadpipe of the Yamaha is not oddly large (as are the silly hooters that the factory slaps on the 2165). However, this tuba makes less sound than my Holton. My Holton has what I consider to be a fairly tight leadpipe, so I will need to try this Warburton on that tuba before I sell it. I am interested to see how they work together.
I will also try to photograph the "Revelation 52" and the "TG1" to compare them more directly. (My memory for this sort of stuff is spotty at best; I am not *in* to mouthpieces and gear and such, having sold my trumpets decades ago, heh, heh…)
Also, if anyone wants a new Warburton big-ass TG1, I will have one for sale very soon. I bought the TG1L, which is a Euro shank. The Yamaha has a weird receiver, and I have not yet decided whether it wants Euro or American shank tapers. Both "fit" without wobble, but both fit into the extra-long receiver pretty far. I just dropped nearly $300 more to get the Am shank "TG1" and will play both, as both seem to fit and it comes down to the depth of insertion. Again, I have to try both to see which one seems to work "correctly" (whatever that might be).
Once I have used both a few times the winner stays and the loser goes up for sale here for a reasonable price as a mint *used* mouthpiece. I have about five other spendy pieces that I tried with this tuba, again, mostly trying to find things that fit well enough to give me usable information. Most did, and I just did not care for them for whatever reason. Some just did not fit, but they all fit my Miraphone and Adams receivers, so the mouthpieces are fine (and again - "mint") and will sell at used prices that are fair because I do not need $1,500 worth of barely used mouthpieces sitting on top of my piano gathering dust; I find one mouthpiece for a horn and never really switch again, and I have what I want for my other tubas.
The future owners of these babies are out there somewhere…
The "TG" in the name is a joke, standing for "The Grail".
The inner rim bite is quite sharp, and the rim is very flat. The cup is as deep as Hermione Granger's purse. The throat is too drilled out for my lungs; I can feel just about zero resistance compared to a Conn Helleberg 120. I think you could drive a Trabant through this thing!
In truth, it looks like a Doug Elliott "T" cup with the largest shank that he used to offer, a "T8A+" — only larger. I suspect that the original (Warburton's "TG2" with the tighter throat) might be more to my liking. Maybe not. But the sharp rim is not to my liking as it wears me out!
The leadpipe of the Yamaha is not oddly large (as are the silly hooters that the factory slaps on the 2165). However, this tuba makes less sound than my Holton. My Holton has what I consider to be a fairly tight leadpipe, so I will need to try this Warburton on that tuba before I sell it. I am interested to see how they work together.
I will also try to photograph the "Revelation 52" and the "TG1" to compare them more directly. (My memory for this sort of stuff is spotty at best; I am not *in* to mouthpieces and gear and such, having sold my trumpets decades ago, heh, heh…)
Also, if anyone wants a new Warburton big-ass TG1, I will have one for sale very soon. I bought the TG1L, which is a Euro shank. The Yamaha has a weird receiver, and I have not yet decided whether it wants Euro or American shank tapers. Both "fit" without wobble, but both fit into the extra-long receiver pretty far. I just dropped nearly $300 more to get the Am shank "TG1" and will play both, as both seem to fit and it comes down to the depth of insertion. Again, I have to try both to see which one seems to work "correctly" (whatever that might be).
Once I have used both a few times the winner stays and the loser goes up for sale here for a reasonable price as a mint *used* mouthpiece. I have about five other spendy pieces that I tried with this tuba, again, mostly trying to find things that fit well enough to give me usable information. Most did, and I just did not care for them for whatever reason. Some just did not fit, but they all fit my Miraphone and Adams receivers, so the mouthpieces are fine (and again - "mint") and will sell at used prices that are fair because I do not need $1,500 worth of barely used mouthpieces sitting on top of my piano gathering dust; I find one mouthpiece for a horn and never really switch again, and I have what I want for my other tubas.
The future owners of these babies are out there somewhere…