not a repair post; a damage post

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Rick Denney
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Re: not a repair post; a damage post

Post by Rick Denney »

UncleBeer wrote: Mon Jan 29, 2024 4:58 am How about this? Came through my shop several years ago. A Martin (largely) fiberglass tuba. Sounded OK.


IMG_20221005_104430401_11zon.jpg
As the owner of one of these, I can identify several weakness in the design that would cause problems with school gorillas. One is that the attachments of the braces to the fiberglass bows was done using fiberglass resin, probably plain old polyurethane resin. If they had used epoxy, they wouldn't have all let go on mine.

The other weakness is the bell edge, as your pictures shows. It needs some sort of reinforcement to prevent cracks in the fiberglass binder.

Also, I suspect those slick Martin thumbscrew-tightened mouthpipe adjustment bits are about as easily lost as King sousaphone tuning bits, but more difficult to replace.

I disagree with Bloke about the fourth valve, especially if the alternative is a three-valve compensator. With compensation, the pistons are a couple of inches longer, and that makes for an even more fragile assembly when (not if) it is dropped, and that much more opportunity for the casing to get tweaked when (not if) the tuba is dropped. It's not that hard to route fourth-valve tubing in a way that allows it some protection. But fourth valve branches were often added as an upgrade, and so were designed to be easy to install after the other three valve branches have already been assembled (or at least they were designed around the other three branches). This is especially true with old budget tubas that routinely came with three valves.

There are some design features all tubas should have, but that they have never had. One is, like saxophones, guard covers over exposed tuning slides with enough crush space to absorb the usual bumps. Another is handles. And some braces that instead of using the valve tubes as the connecting nodes, extend from outer branch to outer branch all the way across the tuba so that a blow to the outer branch doesn't have to be absorbed by the valve tubing. And then a heavy brass ring around outer branches at key brace attachment points, to prevent the tubing itself from caving in when the brace is overloaded (or when the tuba falls over). These features would add some weight, but then other things could be a bit lighter. And those school kids need the exercise.

But one thing that would reduce the damage considerably would be parents being required to place a deposit on the instruments the kid borrows from the school, the remainder of which is returned after the abuse-related repairs are paid for. It would never be big enough for real accident, but it would cover a lot of the usual carelessness. I'm thinking $500 for tubas. Or make fiberglass sousaphones available for only a $200 deposit, for the impecunious. Would that kill band programs? Maybe, but school districts seem to be killing band programs anyway.

As to the use of Chinese instruments, that's a given. Nobody is making alternatives for student use, and even Yamaha student tubas are almost assuredly made in China.

Rick "insurance would be too expensive because the risk is too high" Denney


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bloke
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Re: not a repair post; a damage post

Post by bloke »

@Rick Denney

The advantage of a 3-valve compensating system in a school isn't that it weighs less, though it might possibly, but it's that there's not a some several feet long extra loop of tubing that only almost does what a three valve compensating system does, that tubing wanders all around the instrument, and a bunch of braces are required to hold all that snake of tubing in place. 4th valves offer a good solution to 1-3 and a crappy solution for 1-2-3. Below low E - a pitch which is still stinky sharp with four non-compensating valves, the only valve combination that serendipitously works out is 2-3-4, so we're back to falstones (as with the non-compensating 3-valve system, again...and what percentage of school children are going to pull slides, even when told to?

You're a smart guy, and - even if you don't agree with me - you understand my points:
- Even if three compensating valves somehow doesn't weigh any less than four non-compensating valves, it's a far less fragile setup... the thread topic being ridiculous damage.
- three compensating valves does a better job - referring to the B-flat world - with low E and B natural - pitches which are not as well addressed with four non-compensating valves.

Other reasons for four noncompensating valves could be "I'm used to four non-compensating valves" or "I don't like top action", but neither are a particularly good argument against an already good-playing fiberglass sousaphone enhanced with three front action compensating valves for school use indoors and outdoors, agreed?
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Re: not a repair post; a damage post

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I’m not arguing the efficacy of compensation. But putting a kid on the three-valve compensator path from the start will mean that they will have nearly no similar choices to buy when the school tuba is no longer available to them. Even where compensation is the standard (which is nowhere in the USA), three-valve compensators are not thick on the ground.

And it’s sheer fantasy to imagine a three-valve front-action compensation system on a sousaphone. If schools are spending taxpayer money, I prefer that they buy in the middle of the market, where competition will (without corruption) provide the best value. And I define value as a ratio of quality to cost, and that happens in the middle of the market.

I don’t have a problem with limiting them to fiberglass sousaphones, given that that’s how I was limited until my senior year in high school. And I don’t have a problem with top-action instruments, though I’m surprised you don’t. One good whack on the outer branch usually distorts the valve body enough to impinge function, as I have heard you argue in the dim past :)

Rick “not sure the valve swindle is the most significant cause of poor intonation in school bands” Denney
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Re: not a repair post; a damage post

Post by bloke »

Of course, you're right...

None of us every managed to figure out 4, 5, or 6 valves - having started on only 3. :eyes:
(You're arguing for the sake of arguing - which is what we do, here.)

Demand drives manufacturing.
If enough people were educated enough to understand the benefits, most school instruments - likely - would be 3-valve compensating.
What's preventing the demand is ignorance.
As Conn is building (ridiculous) four-valve short-action sousaphones (because some directors are silly enough to demand them - lacking the understanding to realize how little benefit there is), some far-more flexible (not Taiwanese - as they seem to be quite inflexible, but) Chinese manufacturer would jump on the idea.

Right now, I can think of someone who might be screen-shooting this and sending it off to someone else.

but AGAIN......
For there to a REAL demand, a bunch of band directors would need to be un-stupefied, and properly educated/informed as to the advantages of three-valve compensating...

...but really, Rick...
...putting a kid on the three-valve compensator path from the start will mean that they will have nearly no similar choices to buy when the school tuba is no longer available to them...
is a REALLY lame for-the-sake-of-arguing argument.

Think of all the other "different-to-learn-later" mess there is, out there:
- trumpets with #1 slide thumb saddles, multi-length trumpets, and 4-valve piccolo trumpets
- four valve COMPENSATING euphoniums (vs. the flood of YEP-201's, YEP-321's, and their various knockoffs)
- DOUBLE French horns (vs. single...as well as triple, descant, and on-and-on...)
- F-attachment and double-valve bass trombones (vs. so-called "straight" trombones)
- oboes, bassoons, and bass clarinets with tons more gadgetry than with the "school" ones
- three OTHER lengths of tubas with just about every valve configuration imaginable

...Your "engineer" is showing, my good friend...

...and (seriously...) the ONLY difference between three-valve COMPENSATING tubas/sousaphones and three-valve NON-compensating tubas/(sousaphones) is "better intonation"...NOTHING different regarding any of the button-mashing (and surely: you knew this...??)
...and on-and-on-and-on...

Yes..."3-valve compensating" - other than English baritones - is extinct (but it is STUPID that it's extinct, and should be brought back - asap).

ANY four-valve "school" tubas and sousaphones:
repair NIGHTMARES, and - BOY-OH-BOY - to the little 11-year-old through 23-year-old school-children TEAR THE SH!T out of ANYTHING school-owned that is 4-valve (vs. the amount that they tear up ANYTHING that is 3-valve).

99.99% of ALL old Besson 3-valve compensating tubas encountered:
- the unholy-hell beat out of their exterior bows/bells
- no repairs required to their 3-valve compensating valvesets

some nose-in-air peeps:
"I don't do school repairs."

me:
"Schools pay better (more) than anyone else, because it's not their own money...
...so why DON'T you...?? Is it because they're TOO HARD, and there are TOO MANY of them to repair in TOO SHORT an allotted time...??"


Last edited by bloke on Mon Jan 29, 2024 11:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: not a repair post; a damage post

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You wrote all that and you are accusing me of arguing for the sake of arguing?

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Re: not a repair post; a damage post

Post by bloke »

Rick Denney wrote: Mon Jan 29, 2024 11:03 pm You wrote all that and you are accusing me of arguing for the sake of arguing?

Rick “uh, yeah” Denney
I'll interpret that as conceding. :tuba:
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Re: not a repair post; a damage post

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Interpret it however you want.

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Re: not a repair post; a damage post

Post by bloke »

One good troll deserves another. I'll call it a draw.
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