On a 5-valve F tuba, what would be the purpose of a 5th valve circuit is the same length as the 4th valve circuit?
A regular 4th valve lowers pitch by 2.5 steps. So I'm talking about a 5th valve that also lowers pitch by 2.5 steps. Is there a name for this setup? Is this common
All I can figure beyond "different options" is that 4-5 together would lower pitch by 5 steps, which is low G... Which is an easier fingering solution for a note that usually requires a lot more valves, and is not usually the most fun note to play on any F tuba.
I don't know much about Vienna F tubas, but is this possible some kind of relic from that setup?
I guess there are other options too:
* Cut the 5th valve circuit to either the normal flat first valve length, or the usual 2 step 5th valve length.
* Get a longer slide to make it a quint valve. But then is that weird to have the 5th valve be a quint valve, instead of a regular 5th valve plus a quint valve?
* Tune the 5th valve to be like a flat 4th valve (ok, now my brain hurts thinking of how that would work).
Thanks!
![Tuba :tuba:](./images/smilies/tuba.gif)