New year, new me!
I think I am going to try to make this old, beater, homebrew "CC" 186 into my MSOBQ tuba for our many, many educational programs. This year's show is very difficult to knock out at a high level with little to no warm-up at nine in the morning on a Monday, 40 times a season. I really need to do it on a CC, and had been dinking around with my "good" 186 with this in mind… and then I sold it. So, no.
Truth be told, I had completely forgotten that this tuba was tucked away in the corner of my tuba room under three empty gig bags.
To sort of finish up the above thread before launching into this new continuation, the horn worked pretty well in freelance settings, but when I took it to a rehearsal for one of my quintets (Capital Brass), I could not easily get it into tune with the group. Could. Not.
I was very busy dialing in the factory CC and gave up on this tuba for the time being, and that stretched into about four years.
Whoops!
Now I have been sitting around grousing about having to sell my lovely, old 186 and having to take my YamaYork to everything, even to stage setups where a smallish beater would have been the better choice and not the spendy, silver "trust fund" tuba.
The other day, I remembered this tuba, suspended in carbonite, and that I had cannibalized it a few times for parts, and that it was unplayable. I also remembered that the bell rim I had installed was disastrous and would require a ton of work before I could use the instrument again.
It needed:
• three Minibal links
• three Minibal alignment discs
• three Minibal Torx screws
• one 5th valve linkage rod
• a leadpipe
• a mouthpiece receiver
• removal, annealing, and reshaping of bell kranz
• reinstallation of bell kranz
This is a tall order for me right now, as I am in the process of getting ready for cataract surgery in both eyes and am having issues with either my heart or my heart meds. (Probably the meds, otherwise the docs would be pushing the testing along with alacrity.)
So today I was freaking BORED and decided to drag out the homemade CC 186 to see what it needs and what I have on hand. That way, I could at least consider sending in an order for parts to Miraphone despite the damnable tariffs.
I have everything.
Right here.
Just sitting in snap-lid boxes in ziplock baggies.
All of it.
Hot
damn baby!
So I dug up the needed tools, set the parts aside, put away the boxes, cleared my bench, and slung baby up there for the first time in years.
All I did was tape on the beater 188 leadpipe that came on the "good" 186, but that did not fit right. It has some dings and is… funny looking… but plays really well.
I no longer GAS about "funny looking" and I have a brand new receiver that fits it perfectly. So I used blue tape to slap those on. After checking that it was sealed up well enough to test the horn, I locked the 5th valve open and replaced most of the missing valve parts. (I could not easily find the old 5th valve link rod, but it is there… somewhere… I'll find it later.)
I spent about an hour playing it with a tuner and drone pitches.
MOST IMPORTANT NOTES FROM TESTING:
This is a really darned good tuba. I put it away when I suddenly could not play it in tune with itself. I had been using the much smaller N/OS 1977-ish Miraphone pipe, and in hindsight, I can see that this tuba hates that pipe. It just does not work. I tried it out, and the open partials were whacked out like you wouldn't believe. Don't ask me why. The answer is far above my pay grade as a Screw Turning Monkey.
I went with the old, beater 188 pipe that needed a receiver. Everything lined up quite well.
Day and night, Night and day.
Again, my contract as a Screw Turning Monkey prohibits me from actual cogitation, so I have no idea why, and I am not paid enough to care.
The bell rim is actually fine. I would expect this sort of mess if I had bought it used and in rough shape. It will take a lot of work to clean up, but that it all it *needs* — a cosmetic bit of clean-up work.
Valves all work well, except for 1st, and that just needs a bit of lubrication. The slides all still work nicely. I could not tell that this tuba had been sitting in a bag untouched for more than four years.
So this evening I plan on cleaning up the leadpipe and installing the receiver. I will also get impatient and install the leadpipe to the instrument when I ought to wait until tomorrow, but I am a bit stupid in this regard… heh, heh…
I also plan on making the 5th valve functional tonight. Tomorrow I will look at the bell rim to see if it is in a condition to use this horn at work on Monday. (We have four of those kiddie shows where this tuba would greatly enhance my ability to walk in unprepared, early on a Monday morning, and do a good job.)
So I have tonight and all day tomorrow to learn and polish that show on CC tuba, and it ought to be fine.
So I sold my classic and much beloved 186.
BUT THAT'S OKAY BECAUSE I HAVE ANOTHER ONE RIGHT HERE! MUWAHAHAHA!!!
The one I sold was the factory CC 186, which is on the right. This bastardized 186 that I hacked and chopped up to use as a CC tuba is on the left. I also did not want to buy another 5th valve, and had not yet made that excellent 5th valve that I ended up with, so it has the wrong type, and the 5th slide looks weird. But it works quite well, so I will not be "fixing that. It stays.
Here is that slide, but a bit closer to the camera. Joe had to do something like this to that nice, silver 186 that he sold to Doc.
Leadpipe taped on, 5th valve not yet hooked up…
Plays in tune with the mail slide set here…
If everything works out with this tuba, it will become my main horn in the MSO brass quintet, and maybe in Capital Brass, too. Once I get used to it, I will start using it at freelance gigs.
And the crappy beater Tuba Exchange gig bag it has lived in for the last four years will be replaced with the "leftover" blue Miraphone-branded bag made for the 186. I used it for my Kurath for years until I got the better-fitting Cronkhite bag.
This 186 bag has spent years serving as a comfy, scratchable, padded cat bed.
Sorry, kitties. You lose.