OK...
HOLTON TUBA-WISE today was quite a crescendo.
The valveset is mounted, the 5th valve is mounted (several things required in order for that to happen, including more precisely fitting the Jinbao back bearing to the casing, so I won't have to beat the hell out of the rotor's valve stem, whenever I want to remove the rotor (and yes, I know I could have bought detachable hardware from Conn-Selmer, Europe, or a couple of places in the U.S.A., but - in SPITE of SUPER-nestling this valveset - I just wanted to (being on old-school old fart) meet the challenge of dealing with several variables in an algebra/geometry problem. Oh yeah...and put the tuba together with an EMPTY rotor casing, and then installed the rotor and bearing. In spite of remarkably close quarters (again: "nestled"), they install easily.
To describe just how "nestled" this valveset is: When you site across the bell sideways (across the center of the engraving) all you can see of the first valve casing is the first valve top cap...and that 4th valve "glob" (that seems to tower out in front of the tuba) actually can NOT be seen, from that perspective...
...and - when you take a look at the mouthpipe-fitting pictures, below (in particular: those of you who've been able to reuse King mouthpipes) you will definitely see how compact (back-to-front) this instrument was built.
btw...The mouthpipe is
NOT yet soldered on at all.
TUNING:
> #1 - great
> #2 - probably short enough (will know when the entire instrument has been shortened, but logic dictates that it is short enough)
> #3 - short enough, after I remove the excess at the bottom (which I've X-ing out in red, in all the pictures.
#4 - great
#5 - great. 1-3-5 is wonderful for B-natural and 4-5 is wonderful for low E. (The 5th circuit is an FF SEMITONE, and
NOT an FF whole tone).
> overall pitch level: slightly flat-natured, but this is JUST as I had hoped. The picture below (of what will happen to the main slide bow and main slide ferrules) tells the story. One more thing about the main slide: I spent about a half hour (on another day) working on the main slide bow, of which its tubing was quite OVAL from the factory. It is now ROUND - from its 11/16th inch bore end around to its 3/4th inch bore end.
Anyway...There's quite a bit more little crap left to do, including hardening up all of the new braces, which were stuck in place, today...
...and no: I have NOT begun to build the 5th rotor thumb mechanism, and NO, I don't yet know how the hell it's going to look...but it will "look" some way.
Jinbao rotors comment:
It's funny how close those things are to being "good". It's just that it's obvious that they hurry though a couple of stages in manufacturing that - otherwise - would define them as "good", but - since they (apparently) stop with their manufacturing before those steps, they only seem to end up being "fair". It didn't take that long (an hour, I guess...??) for me to boost this rotor up from "fair" to "good". Am I soliciting other folks' Jinbao rotor tubas going-back-over jobs? NO...I absolutely am NOT.
![Eyes :eyes:](./images/smilies/e21531.gif)