For the first years of my life, I grew up in a non-air-conditioned house (my baby bed was in the attic - in the south), and attended all non-air-conditioned schools.
When it's really hot (90's) I air-condition down to around 81 F. during the day and 78 F. at night.
When it's pretty darn cold (20's or teens) I heat the place up to 59 or (actually) burn wood and warm the place up to whatever I can manage about that.
I sleep on top of the sheet in the summer and under the blanket in the winter. I wear sweatshirts, long trousers, and socks in the winter, and loose fitting clothing in the summer.
...so (six months out of the year) my tuning slides are either way in or way out. Otherwise, playing wildly sharp or flat sounds "funny".
no...I'm really pretty bad with tuning, which is why it's what I mostly work on...but I can sure hear when it's nowhere close.Here's bloke again, bragging about hearing the grass grow...
...If I cool or heat the "tuba playing" part of the house to an optimum 73 or so degrees (frankly) it feels really dry in the winter and cold in the summer, it takes time to get it to that temperature, and it costs a bunch of money (to do that every day for an hour or two, plus the time the hear or air runs constantly to get the temperature to that "optimum").
I'm curious whether many others of you are really trying to keep your utility bills down YET are trying to practice "at pitch" in spite of your wide thermostatic settings. (ie. Are any of you people who practice as much as you can manage YET are ALSO utilities cheapskates?)
Luckily, my tuning slides (well...I either built or heavily customized my instruments) have their tuning ranges "centered" on being able to play at pitch between around 60 and 80 degrees Fahrenheit. (As an example, the Miraphone 98 - an 18-foot BB-flat tuba - tunes nearly all the way in when it's only c. 60 degrees in here, and about 1-3/4 inches pulled, when its around 80 degrees in here.)