...so I'm sorta making light of how tuba players refer to their selected instrument for a gig as "weapon of choice"...much as how bass trombone players seem to refer to their instrument/chair/music stand/folder as their "office"...
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This is a 1915 Conn Orchestra Grand (B-flat).
I decided to sell it for a mostly-as-is price to someone who really wants it.
TO BE CLEAR, IT IS SOLD.
I've not seen a picture of another one on the web that checks all these boxes with one instrument:
☑ short mouthpipe
☑ main slide after the valves
☑ four valve front action
☑ left hand accessible upper #1 tuning slide
☑ one-piece original upright bell
☑ all original everything
☑ no cracks nor patches
☑ nearly all of the silver finish intact
☑ playable without thousands of dollars of work beyond the acquisition cost
☑ 3rd partial open F is usable, particularly when the larger bows are warmed up to playing temperature
I'm pretty sure it will be picked up in a few days.
I roughed out the dents, aligned the pistons, straightened out a stem and some buttons, soldered two or three joints...unstuck the stuck slides...
again: very playable, and - if the next owner wants to trick it out, it's quite nice-playing enough to be worthy of that...and it should NOT need to be re-silver plated in any full-blown restoration thing. (again...only a few worn spots)
good-bye pics: (If "Conn Loyalist" wants these, they're welcomed to them. btw...it's a .765" bore instrument, and the bell is 22"...made in 1915...blah-blah-blah...)
farewell to arms
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- bloke
- Mid South Music
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- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19273
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3835 times
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Re: farewell to arms
It would present itself better in these pictures were I to polish it, but that's just not part of the deal.
Some of those black lines and things that used to be dents are no longer dents.
Some of those black lines and things that used to be dents are no longer dents.
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Re: farewell to arms
Wow! There is a "forever" horn if I've ever seen one!
1916 Holton "Mammoth" 3 valve BBb Upright Bell Tuba
1935 King "Symphony" Bass 3 valve BBb Tuba
1998 King "2341" 4 valve BBb Tuba
1970 Yamaha "321" 4 valve BBb Tuba (Yard Goat)
1935 King "Symphony" Bass 3 valve BBb Tuba
1998 King "2341" 4 valve BBb Tuba
1970 Yamaha "321" 4 valve BBb Tuba (Yard Goat)
- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19273
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
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Re: farewell to arms
Imagine after...
- take-apart dent removal
- maybe (??) a valve rebuild job (to bump the valves from B up to A)
- shorten #1 and #3 circuits (from "old school" lengths to modern lengths)
tuning: A=440 is probably about a 1-inch or 1-1/4 inch pull with something like 72-or-so degrees Fahrenheit, but I have to pull out the main slide farther (because I'm only willing to pay for my air-conditioner to cool this place down to 78 degrees, and only that low when I'm practicing).
- take-apart dent removal
- maybe (??) a valve rebuild job (to bump the valves from B up to A)
- shorten #1 and #3 circuits (from "old school" lengths to modern lengths)
tuning: A=440 is probably about a 1-inch or 1-1/4 inch pull with something like 72-or-so degrees Fahrenheit, but I have to pull out the main slide farther (because I'm only willing to pay for my air-conditioner to cool this place down to 78 degrees, and only that low when I'm practicing).