The Kurath (Willson predecessor) I had required me to put it on the chair with me. If tuba stands had been a known thing back then, I would have definitely used one. I was still skinny enough for it to fit on the chair with me, so it wasn't such a big deal. Holding it on my lap, however, WAS a big deal.
I'm curious how much the intonation improved (or didn't) when the Willson 3050 came out. Mine required some work, but at the time, I didn't think it was too much. Today, I'm in the Bloke/Bill Rose camp of "it needs to play in tune very well." If the horn doesn't have a sound a really like, I won't consider it anyway. (Even if Barney's Double Bass $#!+Bugle has perfect intonation, but... uh... sounds like a $#!+ bugle, I won't buy it).The version in C is more difficult to play in tune, with the lower D-sharp as sky-high as the Hirsbrunner D-sharp is gully-low. The combination of “top-heavy“ and “having to constantly work the #3 slide - in addition to having to constantly work the #1 slide“ defines these as (for me) very difficult instruments to operate, with serious struggles involving transcending "operation" on up towards "music creation".
I preach the same information, and I try to practice what I preach (2 BBbs, a CC, an Eb, an F, and a euphonium).The B-flat version is easier to play in tune, but – well - it’s not a “C tuba for kolij“...which is one of the main factors that hurts the selling value of tubas (whether end-user or reseller) built in B-flat in the United States.
Everyone enjoys posting “It doesn’t matter what key your tuba is built in“ when speaking out to teenagers, but – in reality – that’s just so much lip service, compared to what really happens.
I'm a guy who is mostly fat, so I can receive truth without much fuss.bloke "who speaks truth to p̶o̶w̶e̶r̶ mostly, fat guys"
Doc (noting he sounds like himself on all tubas, only nuanced by each instrument's respective design, so intonation is at the top of the list)