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hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 10:11 am
by bloke
I’ve built a wild contraption for someone’s instrument…their idea…
To keep the price down (and - at the same time - to also make it fit on the instrument), the shape of it isn’t traditional. Further, it’s an old “Harv’s happy horns“ creation, so the instrument itself is not traditional, either. It’s sort of interesting, but I’m a little bit afraid of showing it here, as I could risk ridicule.
(ridicule for something other than “my general opinions of things”)
What say ye?
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 10:31 am
by tubaing
One vote for wanting to see
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 10:44 am
by bort2.0
Show it! We'll be nice. Harv was unique, and it's be nice to see one of his creations again, too.
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 11:13 am
by Three Valves
A Rube Goldberg that plays??
Show!!
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 12:21 pm
by matt g
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 12:29 pm
by the elephant
Ladies and gentlemen, I know this is not a contest, but WE HAVE A WINNER!
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 2:23 pm
by iiipopes
No pix - no horn. I'm from Missouri. You're going to have to show me.
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 2:58 pm
by Tubajug
Knowing the quality if your work, I doubt it's all that wild.
C'mon...you know we all want to see it! You can't put a teaser out there like that and not give us the goods!!
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 4:35 pm
by prairieboy1
Show us!!
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 8:14 pm
by bloke
A friend bought an old York E-flat helicon from Harv (c. .65X" bore)
He asked Harv if it could be
- made into a 4-valve
- have slides that could be pushed in or pulled out from E-flat length to C length circuits
- feature on-board "storage" for the E-flat main tuning slide, so that he could change it to E-flat, if he so chose.
Harv did all of that, and pasted on some sort of King (.687") 4th valve. It appears as though Harv used a bottom valve cap as the top valve cap...Whatever...
...so my friend then asked me if I could rig up something to switch the instrument from C to E-flat on the fly, whereby he would only then need to push-in or pull out valve circuit slides, rather than having to actually swap out main slides.
...OK...so I told him "maybe" - which he took as a "YES SIR, ABSOLUTELY !!!"
I put it off (for various reasons, one of which being "How the hell am I going to manage this?" and the other being "how the hell am I going to manage this without charging more than the instrument is probably worth?")
Rummaging through parts, I grabbed a bunch of .65X" bore crap that I had (including some ancient Olds contra crap), threw it into a box, and begin the "Apollo XIII" routine.
some seemingly-conflicting requirements:
- HUNDREDS of dollars (and NOT $1XXX)
- accomplishes the objective (C to E-flat "on the fly")
- fits within the VERY restrictive allotted space
- open E-flat instrument AND open C-instrument BOTH tunable
The SEVERAL goofy ("homespun"-looking, to say the
least most) angles not only prevented a bunch of extra work (MONEY), but ALSO prevents the contraption from jabbing the player in the armpit, so...
Please don't laugh (or - actually - just go right ahead...)
The C tuning slide couldn't be allowed to "dead end" into the #1 circuit slide and (again) doing it more elegantly would have required more time/parts/MONEY, and would NOT have played ANY better.
...so one (if a SUDDEN change to E-flat is desired (as I made C "default"), one rests their left-hand fingers on the UNDERSIDES Of the valve casings, and operates this gizmo with their left THUMB.
A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE !!!
...OR:
https://i.imgur.com/WSoK0si.mp4
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 8:37 pm
by the elephant
An ascending valve that acts like a "reverse F attachment" in practice, if not in actual tonality.
Great!
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 8:45 pm
by matt g
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 8:54 pm
by bloke
the elephant wrote: ↑Mon Jan 17, 2022 8:37 pm
An ascending valve that acts like a "reverse F attachment" in practice, if not in actual tonality.
Great!
I was in too much of a hurry to bother with worrying whether it would do "E-flat to C" or "C to E-flat" when tossing this thing together, BUT...That really didn't matter, because I was planning on grinding off the "housetop" from the rotor stem ANYWAY, to make it REVERSIBLE, which I did.
- How doth exist this wizardry.png (3.13 KiB) Viewed 1343 times
Re: hesitant
Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2022 9:01 pm
by bloke
Suddenly, several albatrosses are falling from my neck.
Next week, the doc (his name REALLY IS "Payne"
) is cutting on me and rearranging my insides to a better config
(VERY routine stuff...Do NOT worry about me. Do NOT think "bloke". Rather, think of various Asian-languages words which mean "hippopotamus" ) , folks' projects - bit-by-bit - are disappearing from blokeplace and migrating back to their owners, and - pretty soon (hopefully) I can get back to slicking out "attic treasures" - for your viewing-and-buying pleasure.
Re: hesitant
Posted: Tue Jan 18, 2022 6:38 am
by York-aholic
Following your order not to treat your doctor’s visit too seriously:
“Cut him to CC and add a fifth valve!”
Re: hesitant
Posted: Tue Jan 18, 2022 9:17 am
by bort2.0
I Google translated "Hippopotamus" to a bunch of different Asian languages, and have no idea what you were getting at with that statement.
Re: hesitant
Posted: Tue Jan 18, 2022 9:37 am
by bloke
yet... I succeeded in drawing your attention AWAY FROM my personally scheduled slicing/dicing and TOWARDS "something (anything) else", which was my objective.
(Arnold Jacobs is said to have used this same technique, when trying to pull students away from playing neuroses or bad habits.)
bort2.0 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 18, 2022 9:17 am
I Google translated "Hippopotamus" to a bunch of different Asian languages, and have no idea what you were getting at with that statement.
Re: hesitant
Posted: Tue Jan 18, 2022 1:31 pm
by tubadude
Joe, you did a heck of a job on my frankencon. Thank you for the great work. I'm planning on spending a couple of hours tonight getting reacquainted with horn. I didn't think the neighborhood would have appreciated me honking on it last night when I got home from your place around 11pm. Man, I really love your work and trust your judgement and expertise. I really enjoyed our hang time and reminiscing about our twisted and tangled careers. I look forward to our next hang. Good luck next week, I'll light a candle and say a quick prayer for your speedy recovery. Stay safe and healthy my friend.
Re: hesitant
Posted: Wed Jan 19, 2022 1:40 pm
by iiipopes
Re: hesitant
Posted: Wed Jan 19, 2022 2:17 pm
by bloke
@iiipopes
You're about two hours from this instrument.