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Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Thu Jun 18, 2026 6:27 am
by prodigal
Hi Friends,

I found this old King/HN White/Cleveland sousaphone on top of a locker. It is missing the leadpipe assembly, but the valves move smoothly.

Fix it up, part it out, or off to my local scrapyard. (They pay pretty well for brass.)
WIN_20260618_08_17_43_Pro_optimized.jpg
WIN_20260618_08_17_43_Pro_optimized.jpg (50.54 KiB) Viewed 390 times

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Thu Jun 18, 2026 6:46 am
by arpthark
Fix! These are great sousaphones.

I owned one which was school surplus. The thing to watch out for if buying a neck is to buy the old-style King neck instead of the new-style King neck. They're both L-shaped, but the old one has the mouthpiece receiver on the short end of the L and the new one has the receiver on the long end of the L. Just based on the lacquer and the look of this one, I am almost sure it takes an old-style neck.

Send it up to Connecticut and I'll strip the orange lacquer and un-goof it a little bit!

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Thu Jun 18, 2026 9:12 am
by LeMark
I'm hoping you're trolling us here and you wouldn't consider scrapping an HN white sousa because of a misssing neck

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Thu Jun 18, 2026 10:52 am
by Schlitzz
This is one of those perfect pitch exercises for one of those viola players. You toss it into a flaming dumpster, without hitting the sides. Nothing but net.

Seriously? FIX IT!!!

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Thu Jun 18, 2026 10:53 am
by Sousaswag
Old instruments are always worth fixing. Especially that one.

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Thu Jun 18, 2026 11:30 am
by bort2.0
In general, it's pretty obvious when the answer isn't "fix"

But this one is a "fix"

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Thu Jun 18, 2026 1:14 pm
by iiipopes
FIX! (As in, rhymes with 186, the usual standard answer to obvious questions on the other forum)

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Fri Jun 19, 2026 8:38 am
by bloke
It's also missing the lower mouth pipe tube and receiver as well as the bracing system for the lower mouth pipe. It's actually missing several hundred dollars worth of parts, but there's still no reason to "scrap" a sousaphone, because of all the other parts are worth so much money.
I distinguish "scrapping" from "parting out" - and I distinguish both of those from "selling as is", but I still don't know if the person that owns this instrument could make a profit after paying a repair guy to straighten out the instrument and supplying the expensive parts.
I've dealt with the current prices on those parts routinely and very recently; it's not casual money anymore.

Today, even Jupiter repair parts (which could be frankensteined on to that King) pricing is highfalutin.

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Fri Jun 19, 2026 8:50 am
by the elephant
I'll take it if you don't want it.

:coffee:

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Fri Jun 19, 2026 9:48 am
by bloke
the elephant wrote: Fri Jun 19, 2026 8:50 am I'll take it if you don't want it.

:coffee:
off-topic:
I sold that really nice 1970s lightweight King fiberglass that I had. I'm not sure why I sold it 🙄, but - after selling it, and wondering why the heck I did that - I went up into the attic, looked through a bunch of boxes, and found everything that is needed to build a brass King sousaphone complete body - including one of those better old-style valve sections with the wider main tuning slide bow, yet with good valves. (I have a brass King bell that I kept, which I was playing around with on the fiberglass body... A "plus" is that the brass bell is one of the later vintage ones which is thinner and weighs less. 😎)

I have a gig in October whereby I'm going to need a sousaphone. I have some 20Ks upstairs - one or two of which are playable, but those are for selling eventually. To each his own, but (not enough "punch") I just don't like playing those. (Maybe, because my sousaphone jobs - these days - are so few and far between is why I sold the fiberglass.)

Previously, I also sold another brass (very worn silver, zero dents) King - as an emergency sousaphone - to a college. It had a circa 1949 body mated it to a 1960 bell. It weighed a full 30 lbs. (Not approximately, but THIRTY) This one will be a bit lighter and will feature much better piston/casing tolerances.
...Maybe (??) I'll install an upper number one tuning slide on this one and eliminate the lower #1 tuning slide for epic on-the-fly tuning (to eliminate most of those three valve tuba tuning compromises).

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Sat Jun 20, 2026 5:22 am
by prodigal
Thanks for the replies! I'm trying to get some stuff cleaned out of long term storage. We'll see what happens in September.. :fingerscrossed:

We have too many souzies at school. (I said to overhaul the fiberglass Kings, they ordered new Jupiters. :wall:)

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Sun Jun 21, 2026 8:10 pm
by Mary Ann
the elephant wrote: Fri Jun 19, 2026 8:50 am I'll take it if you don't want it.

:coffee:
Yeahbut you won't let him ship it.

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Sun Jun 21, 2026 9:33 pm
by the elephant
True…

Re: Fix, parts, or scrap?

Posted: Mon Jun 22, 2026 5:38 am
by prodigal
If I could float it down the Mississippi.... :smilie8: