I want to know about my old Amati tuba
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I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Hello. If you have any information about the tuba I own, I would like to know.
I bought a used Amati rotary tuba 10 years ago.
There was no information regarding this instrument at the time of purchase, and even when I contacted Amati, I was unable to find out any further details.
In order to share information about the instrument and the information I have researched, I would like to hear from anyone who knows the model, year of manufacture, or any other details, or if anyone has an old catalog. thank you.
◯My tuba information
・"Amati KRASLICE" engraved on the front of the bell
・4 rotary of B pipe
・Silver plating
・“Made in CZECHO SLOVAKIA” engraved on the mouth pipe
・"63566" is engraved on the base that supports the spring of the No. 1 rotary
・"X4" is engraved on the outside of the tube containing the No. 1 rotary
◯Survey results
・Maybe, the model number is ABB481, Model68/L. same as CBB681.
・Maybe, made in Cerveny and sold under the Amati brand
・Since it is not S-linkages, it is thought to be from 1980 or later, but from the name of the country stamped on it, it is thought to be before 1992.
◯What I want to know
・Model
・Manufacturing date
・Price at that time, etc.
I bought a used Amati rotary tuba 10 years ago.
There was no information regarding this instrument at the time of purchase, and even when I contacted Amati, I was unable to find out any further details.
In order to share information about the instrument and the information I have researched, I would like to hear from anyone who knows the model, year of manufacture, or any other details, or if anyone has an old catalog. thank you.
◯My tuba information
・"Amati KRASLICE" engraved on the front of the bell
・4 rotary of B pipe
・Silver plating
・“Made in CZECHO SLOVAKIA” engraved on the mouth pipe
・"63566" is engraved on the base that supports the spring of the No. 1 rotary
・"X4" is engraved on the outside of the tube containing the No. 1 rotary
◯Survey results
・Maybe, the model number is ABB481, Model68/L. same as CBB681.
・Maybe, made in Cerveny and sold under the Amati brand
・Since it is not S-linkages, it is thought to be from 1980 or later, but from the name of the country stamped on it, it is thought to be before 1992.
◯What I want to know
・Model
・Manufacturing date
・Price at that time, etc.
- Attachments
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- DSC_1829~2 (1).jpg (152.74 KiB) Viewed 1880 times
Amati ABB481
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Very interesting tuba. It has the modern style of engraving that started it the early 90's, but the spatulas are in the style that ended when the engraving changed
Do you live in Europe? They might have held onto the older spatula design longer there
Yes, it's basically a cerveny. The only difference between the amati rotor tubas and the cerveny tubas was the use of nickel silver outer slides in the cerveny instead of brass. Since your tuba is silver plated, it's much more difficult to tell that.
I can't remember the prices back then, but I'm guessing around $4000 new
Do you live in Europe? They might have held onto the older spatula design longer there
Yes, it's basically a cerveny. The only difference between the amati rotor tubas and the cerveny tubas was the use of nickel silver outer slides in the cerveny instead of brass. Since your tuba is silver plated, it's much more difficult to tell that.
I can't remember the prices back then, but I'm guessing around $4000 new
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
I had a tuba pretty much exactly like that, in lacquer, purchased from Tuba Exchange in the early 1980’s. The model number is indeed ABB 681 and it is analogous to the Cerveny 681. I thought it was a great horn and I regret selling it.
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Wonderful condition !!!
I believe I would have personally preferred string linkage that they put on those instruments prior to that type of linkage. If I owned one - and someone was willing to machine me some extra long ball cup screws and lock nuts, I'd probably be perfectly satisfied with that linkage, though.
Those tubas are so thin and light that- no matter how smushed up one was that someone brought to me to repair - I've never had to take them apart to repair them.
I believe I would have personally preferred string linkage that they put on those instruments prior to that type of linkage. If I owned one - and someone was willing to machine me some extra long ball cup screws and lock nuts, I'd probably be perfectly satisfied with that linkage, though.
Those tubas are so thin and light that- no matter how smushed up one was that someone brought to me to repair - I've never had to take them apart to repair them.
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Thank you for your reply and for providing the information.LeMark wrote: ↑Sun Apr 28, 2024 6:07 am Very interesting tuba. It has the modern style of engraving that started it the early 90's, but the spatulas are in the style that ended when the engraving changed
Do you live in Europe? They might have held onto the older spatula design longer there
Yes, it's basically a cerveny. The only difference between the amati rotor tubas and the cerveny tubas was the use of nickel silver outer slides in the cerveny instead of brass. Since your tuba is silver plated, it's much more difficult to tell that.
I can't remember the prices back then, but I'm guessing around $4000 new
If the engraving is correct, it would be in the early 1990s, but considering the country name it would be 1992, so I understood that it was made during this time.
Do you have any information on how the engraving changed?
Thank you for letting me know the difference between Cerveny Tuba and Amati Tuba. If the outer slide is nickel silver, is it correct to assume that it was made in Cerveny and sold under the Amati brand?
thank you.
Last edited by Tombass on Mon Apr 29, 2024 12:24 am, edited 1 time in total.
Amati ABB481
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
My gosh that thing looks remarkably similar to an old Mirafone 185. How wide is the bell? Bore size? Very nice condition for an older horn.
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Thank you for your reply and for providing the information.
Something similar was sold in the early 1980s. Was it ABB481 that you purchased? I feel like some of the older ABB481s are from ClockWorkSpring, but what do you think of the ones you purchased?
thank you.
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Thank you for providing us with this valuable catalog that is no longer available. I'm very surprised.b.williams wrote: ↑Sun Apr 28, 2024 7:13 am Try this:
Amati Rotor 1970 Roster
https://onedrive.live.com/?authkey=%21A ... by&o=OneUp
I looked at it and it seems that the 1654-4 and 1655-4 are close in spec to my tuba.
Does open springs in Notes refer to something like my tuba that uses Spring to drive a rotary? *For those without A, the rotary drive is a clock work spring type.
If you know anything, please let me know. thank you.
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- b.williams (Mon Apr 29, 2024 2:57 pm)
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Thank you for your reply.bloke wrote: ↑Sun Apr 28, 2024 7:49 am Wonderful condition !!!
I believe I would have personally preferred string linkage that they put on those instruments prior to that type of linkage. If I owned one - and someone was willing to machine me some extra long ball cup screws and lock nuts, I'd probably be perfectly satisfied with that linkage, though.
Those tubas are so thin and light that- no matter how smushed up one was that someone brought to me to repair - I've never had to take them apart to repair them.
What kind of string linkage do you recommend? I was very interested.
Will you also have repairs done? I sometimes hear a clicking sound when I move the rotary, so I would like some advice on what to do.
thank you.
Last edited by Tombass on Mon Apr 29, 2024 12:28 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Thank you for your reply. I looked at the image, and it certainly looks similar to Miraphone 185. I will share the results of measuring my instrument.
◯Specifications of my tuba
bell:400mm
bore:20mm
height:1000mm
Is it possible to make it in Amati or Cerveny and sell it under another manufacturer's name?
thank you.
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
The reason cerveny tubas look like miraphones is that at the end of WW2, the Czech craftsmen fled the communist rule of the east, took their tooling with them, and started miraphone in West Germany. At the time the cerveny model was known as the 68. It became the miraphone 86, and changed to the 186 when exported to the US.
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
My apologies. It was the ABB 481, NOT 681. I still say it’s analogous to the Cerveny 681. It was early ‘80’s but no clockwork springs. Linkage looked pretty much just like yours. I loved it. Great tone, and I sounded very good on it. It was a lightly built tone machine. Tuba Exchange had gotten in a shipment of 6 and I tried all of them before settling on the one I bought. Tone wise and playability wise it was the pick of the litter. But that shows there is variability within that model.Tombass wrote: ↑Sun Apr 28, 2024 11:45 pmThank you for your reply and for providing the information.
Something similar was sold in the early 1980s. Was it ABB481 that you purchased? I feel like some of the older ABB481s are from ClockWorkSpring, but what do you think of the ones you purchased?
thank you.
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Heh. Just noticed you can see "Cerveny" engraved on some of those tubas in the pictures in that Amati catalog. The "Opera Model" (Piggy) BBb is also listed, separate from the Arion. It did exist!
Sorry to derail, carry on.
Sorry to derail, carry on.
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
they didn't fled the communist rule, they were kicked out of Czechoslovakia because they were Sudeten Germans and the Germans weren't that popular in Europe at that time.LeMark wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 5:03 am The reason cerveny tubas look like miraphones is that at the end of WW2, the Czech craftsmen fled the communist rule of the east, took their tooling with them, and started miraphone in West Germany. At the time the cerveny model was known as the 68. It became the miraphone 86, and changed to the 186 when exported to the US.
My tubas equal 3288
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Thank you for letting me know.LeMark wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 5:03 am The reason cerveny tubas look like miraphones is that at the end of WW2, the Czech craftsmen fled the communist rule of the east, took their tooling with them, and started miraphone in West Germany. At the time the cerveny model was known as the 68. It became the miraphone 86, and changed to the 186 when exported to the US.
I was surprised to learn for the first time that the model changes depending on the country it is exported to and the situation at the time.
I was really interested in the history of each company. I will investigate.
thank you.
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Thank you for letting me know in detail.DonO. wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 9:21 amMy apologies. It was the ABB 481, NOT 681. I still say it’s analogous to the Cerveny 681. It was early ‘80’s but no clockwork springs. Linkage looked pretty much just like yours. I loved it. Great tone, and I sounded very good on it. It was a lightly built tone machine. Tuba Exchange had gotten in a shipment of 6 and I tried all of them before settling on the one I bought. Tone wise and playability wise it was the pick of the litter. But that shows there is variability within that model.Tombass wrote: ↑Sun Apr 28, 2024 11:45 pmThank you for your reply and for providing the information.
Something similar was sold in the early 1980s. Was it ABB481 that you purchased? I feel like some of the older ABB481s are from ClockWorkSpring, but what do you think of the ones you purchased?
thank you.
Looking at the catalog, it seems that both specifications are available.
I couldn't compare them because I bought them secondhand, but I was surprised to see that there seemed to be individual differences.
Although it's an old instrument, I really like the tone, so I can understand why you say it's the best.
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Thank you for the message.
Indeed, if you look at the catalog, there are some that have the cerveny stamp, and the lineup seems to be a little different from now.
I found a site where you can also view old pamphlets from other manufacturers, so I would like to share them with you as a reference.
https://www.horn-u-copia.net/library.shtml
thank you.
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
I have told this story before here. When I was a freshman in college in 1974, or perhaps early 1975, I went to the “Mid-East” band conference in Pittsburgh, PA. It was an attempt to provide a Mid-West type experience for band directors from the East that was closer for them. It didn’t last. It may have been the only attempt, or maybe a couple more years, I can’t recall. But Custom Music had a booth with lots of demo tubas on display, and I am sure I played a BBb Piggy. I think they were “exclusive” Cerveny dealers at the time. My memory is clear. I almost bought it. I probably would have if I would have had the cash on hand. It was impressive. And the fact that I considered buying it, well, if it had been CC, I wouldn’t have considered it. I would have only considered a BBb. Because my teacher, unlike many teachers of the time, did not ask me to switch from what I was already comfortable with. So, for all these years, people have been telling me I HAD to be wrong, because that particular horn did not exist. Now we have proof that it did exist! So my story now becomes more believable, does it not? Vindication!
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Re: I want to know about my old Amati tuba
Yep:DonO. wrote: ↑Tue Apr 30, 2024 7:01 amI have told this story before here. When I was a freshman in college in 1974, or perhaps early 1975, I went to the “Mid-East” band conference in Pittsburgh, PA. It was an attempt to provide a Mid-West type experience for band directors from the East that was closer for them. It didn’t last. It may have been the only attempt, or maybe a couple more years, I can’t recall. But Custom Music had a booth with lots of demo tubas on display, and I am sure I played a BBb Piggy. I think they were “exclusive” Cerveny dealers at the time. My memory is clear. I almost bought it. I probably would have if I would have had the cash on hand. It was impressive. And the fact that I considered buying it, well, if it had been CC, I wouldn’t have considered it. I would have only considered a BBb. Because my teacher, unlike many teachers of the time, did not ask me to switch from what I was already comfortable with. So, for all these years, people have been telling me I HAD to be wrong, because that particular horn did not exist. Now we have proof that it did exist! So my story now becomes more believable, does it not? Vindication!
Although I have never seen one nor played one, I would wager the BBb Piggy would be a bit more consistent than the CC Piggy if they are anything like the similarly-sized/slightly smaller bore Arion BBb. The John Packer version of that tuba is excellent.
Blake
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