the elephant wrote: ↑Fri Nov 11, 2022 1:53 pm
So one of my upcoming project horns will be a bare Melton 182 bugle. What should I do with it? Does the low range of this model tend toward rotary F crappiness, or is it more like the Yamaha 621?
I have thought to make a large tenor tuba out of it, possibly in Ab/G# specifically for Bydlo (because why not?) or perhaps a huge euphonium-length tenor tuba in Bb. If these had known-good low registers (which I cannot seem to nail down) I would just make a new valve section for it and keep it in F. I love the tone. Had my 621 had this tone I would have kept it.
Everyone chime in, here. I need feedback.
(Photo by Tabor Fisher)
You know me...the "tuning" guy.
I acquired one of those for PARTS.
Before I took it apart (and I wonder if you ended up with the body that I sold off...) it was (sort of, I suppose...??) fun to toot on, but offered (at least, not me) no usable scale. Two or three people (visiting for repair work) picked it up (without even asking), played it, and insisted that I sell it to them.
I told them I would trade it for a brand spankin' new identical valveset (only). I believe they thought I was being "mean", and that I was disassembling a "perfectly good tuba". I don't have problems with producing any F tubas' pitches just a bit below the staff, so that's never an "F tuba non-starter". (I don't know why I don't, but I just don't.)
Don't get me wrong...It's not as horribly out-of-tune as a depression-era Buescher "monster" E-flat, but (in my experience) not all that much better.
advice...?? (bloke's advice is
REALLY annoying, isn't it?) Sell that on Frankentubas, pick up a beat-up free-to-$100 (no cracks/no patches) old Yamaha 104, straighten it out really nicely, pick up a (no more than 30-year-old, due to current valve-rebuilding costs) King 2341 valveset (one of those seemingly-shady/bad-pictures eBay auctions, where others are afraid to bid much - or MAYBE EVEN a USA-made .658" valveset - from a cheap/trashed 5J), and make yourself another YFB-621...maybe a "better-than-a" YFB-621 - as an alternate F tuba. You've already got three C's, so...
Bydlo...
I have a really pretty-and-rich-sounding/monstrously-large/easy-tuning/compensating euphonium (which pleases me more than the previous one I owned, which I really liked quite a lot). I also found a forgotten YEP-321 in the attic with good valves. I straightened out the 321, and (with a Schilke 51-
NOT-D mouthpiece) used it on (crazy-high tessitura for us guys) "Mars". I would also use the (not-sexy) Yamaha on Bydlo (and same mouthpiece). It offers more zip/clarity, still doesn't sound like a "baritone", is easier to manage in the high range, and requires W-A-Y less practicin' to play stuff in public in the high range. I've heard world-class-sound
(but ACTUALLY) people like CSO people demonstrate this solo on NOT-huge euphonia-sized instruments. It sounds better (to me: more resonant/less muffled/more to-the-fore/clearer). Currently, my 321 is loaned out to a "nice guy", but - if/when I need it for a gig - he would return it pronto.
OK...I'm on one of my "just-type-a-bunch-of-crap/too-much-coffee-with-my-lunch" things, here...
my (compensating and very large-bell-section-and-bore) euphonium:
I've used it (two or three times, since I acquired it) in orchestra concerts (suit/tails/etc.) to play stupid-high (when some post-modern idiot-composer decides to write some weird solo/exposed passage up around E or F-sharp, etc.) isolated passages in tuba parts (which are - otherwise - big-contrabass-tuba-appropriate parts). NOT EVEN the bass trombonist (certainly not the music director) said a d@mn word.
(I apologize, and will stop, now.)