NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
- bloke
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NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
screenshot from fb "frankentubas" forum...
Just as a reminder, an elementary school child's $5 plastic soprano recorder features 9 holes, with 8 fingers responsible for administering to those 9 holes.
- LeMark
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
Where are getting the valve from?
When I warned to add a valve to my king, I lucked into a slightly beat up miraphone 4 valve euph, removed the 4th valve, patched the gap, and wound up with a 3 valve euph I sold for the same price I paid for it.
Is it going to be a long half step valve?
When I warned to add a valve to my king, I lucked into a slightly beat up miraphone 4 valve euph, removed the 4th valve, patched the gap, and wound up with a 3 valve euph I sold for the same price I paid for it.
Is it going to be a long half step valve?
Yep, I'm Mark
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
You can add a 6th but always omit the 5th.
Instead, install a 7th valve in its place. Make it a flat whole step and rig it up like a 5th. It can be your little secret. You can even call it a 5th valve. No one has to know.
Instead, install a 7th valve in its place. Make it a flat whole step and rig it up like a 5th. It can be your little secret. You can even call it a 5th valve. No one has to know.
- bloke
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
Admittedly, that would never have occurred to me.
I should have consulted with you first.
=================================
This is a c. 1960's instrument - I feel quite certain.
It is not "1920's high pitch", but it was (fairly obviously) built as "European high pitch".
Even after the lengthening that I've done to it (including adding a 5th valve WITHOUT shortening the mouthpipe), the A=440 "pull" is still considerable.
Thus, I'm thinking of installing it in the same place as some of the newer *M-W (B&S factory) F tubas...LAST and IN-LINE.
If I shorten the main slide ferrules - and do NOT shorten any of the main slide tubing, I believe I will STILL have more than a thumbnail of A=440 "pull" and - if not - the fail-safe is the mouthpiece receiver, as it "hangs out" from the instrument somewhat, and the small end of the mouthpipe can be trimmed by at least a half an inch...
..."but won't that affect the sound...!?!?"
yes...The pitch will be higher.
__________________________________________
M-W 6460 F tuba: "6th" valve is (nearly) last.
*
==========================================
I should have consulted with you first.
=================================
This is a c. 1960's instrument - I feel quite certain.
It is not "1920's high pitch", but it was (fairly obviously) built as "European high pitch".
Even after the lengthening that I've done to it (including adding a 5th valve WITHOUT shortening the mouthpipe), the A=440 "pull" is still considerable.
Thus, I'm thinking of installing it in the same place as some of the newer *M-W (B&S factory) F tubas...LAST and IN-LINE.
If I shorten the main slide ferrules - and do NOT shorten any of the main slide tubing, I believe I will STILL have more than a thumbnail of A=440 "pull" and - if not - the fail-safe is the mouthpiece receiver, as it "hangs out" from the instrument somewhat, and the small end of the mouthpipe can be trimmed by at least a half an inch...
..."but won't that affect the sound...!?!?"
yes...The pitch will be higher.
__________________________________________
M-W 6460 F tuba: "6th" valve is (nearly) last.
*
==========================================
Who is "Y'all"...??
bloke, the XIIIth just wrote:Remove valves/circuits #'s 3 and 4, shorten that ridiculous mouthpipe, lengthen the main slide by the same amount, install an epic trigger on the lengthened main slide (in order to be able to again play some more of the chromatic pitches) and lighten it up for racing.
Last edited by bloke on Sat Sep 05, 2020 12:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- the elephant
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- bort2.0
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
The idea for adding a 5th to my Alex came from Lee Stofer, before I bought it.
He would have replaced the leadpipe and put the new Alex valve in line with that, ahead of valve #1.
I'm sure the result would be great. Maybe not necessary though!
He would have replaced the leadpipe and put the new Alex valve in line with that, ahead of valve #1.
I'm sure the result would be great. Maybe not necessary though!
- bloke
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
not to worry...
I'm responding to the conch shell.
- bloke
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
Any tuba (just in my opinion) needs a spot-on low F.
If the bugle length is C, either the 1st or 4th slide needs to pull out far enough to play F in tune...and that slide needs to be really easily accessible.
Most rotary tubas' #1 slides are not long enough to accomplish that, and most rotary tubas' #4 slides are inaccessible. The 186 is an exception.
With more that composers and arrangers (who obviously aren't Mahler, and can't hear things in their heads) relying in digital playback (combined with them hearing tuba players screwing around backstage playing below the normally written range of the instrument), the more they are going to write below the normally written range of the instrument (D and beyond...though Prokofiev wrote some very low things from time-to-time).
- bort2.0
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
Low F is 124, with no slide work. Locks in quite well, very solid. No low range crap.
Weird in my fingers. But it sounds great.
No fingering for a true low Db. False tones are ... Not my thing, but can maybe be learned. I'd prefer to have a true low Db option. The note does come up, and I hate faking it.
Weird in my fingers. But it sounds great.
No fingering for a true low Db. False tones are ... Not my thing, but can maybe be learned. I'd prefer to have a true low Db option. The note does come up, and I hate faking it.
- bloke
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
C tuba circuits 1 + 2 are a few inches too long for a GG whole-step circuit, but - when played loudly - the pitch naturally rises to "in tune".
Quite soft, long, and sustained...lipping up a 1-2-4 "low F" can become a chore, after a while...
I guess it also depends on how sharp a C tuba's #1 valve circuit can be pushed in. If normal tuning for that circuit is "out" then 1-2-4 can work out really well, with the #1 circuit slide pushed in as short as possible.
===========================================
To the original topic:
Pushing a few buttons is not difficult. Even with bass guitar (one of the world's easiest-to-play instruments) at least five fingers (me: six) are involved in playing it, as well as incessant "shifts".
Slide pulling/pushing can be distracting, can tend to cause tension, and (with some top-level players in youtube) I've watched #1 slides move nonsensically/habitually - having nothing to do with the valve combinations being depressed nor the pitches being played.
Six buttons (and no slide-pulling) is easy...
...and mashing six on this instrument, six on that instrument, four on that other compensating instrument, four on yet another compensating instrument, four on a non-compensating instrument, five on yet one more instrument, five on even another instrument, and three on a couple of other instruments...That's far easier than maintaining competency on (all of these at once) flute/piccolo, oboe/english horn, clarinet/bass clarinet, soprano/alto/tenor/baritone saxophone, bassoon...as several of my friends (who play touring Broadway shows) are able to do.
Quite soft, long, and sustained...lipping up a 1-2-4 "low F" can become a chore, after a while...
I guess it also depends on how sharp a C tuba's #1 valve circuit can be pushed in. If normal tuning for that circuit is "out" then 1-2-4 can work out really well, with the #1 circuit slide pushed in as short as possible.
===========================================
To the original topic:
Pushing a few buttons is not difficult. Even with bass guitar (one of the world's easiest-to-play instruments) at least five fingers (me: six) are involved in playing it, as well as incessant "shifts".
Slide pulling/pushing can be distracting, can tend to cause tension, and (with some top-level players in youtube) I've watched #1 slides move nonsensically/habitually - having nothing to do with the valve combinations being depressed nor the pitches being played.
Six buttons (and no slide-pulling) is easy...
...and mashing six on this instrument, six on that instrument, four on that other compensating instrument, four on yet another compensating instrument, four on a non-compensating instrument, five on yet one more instrument, five on even another instrument, and three on a couple of other instruments...That's far easier than maintaining competency on (all of these at once) flute/piccolo, oboe/english horn, clarinet/bass clarinet, soprano/alto/tenor/baritone saxophone, bassoon...as several of my friends (who play touring Broadway shows) are able to do.
- Casca Grossa
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
If I were you, do not get this silver plated too thickly. A 6th valve plus too much silver will cause the horn not to resonate.
Mirafone 184 CC
Blokepiece Imperial
Soon to be 5 valve Lignatone/Amati Eb
Blokepiece Solo
Blokepiece Imperial
Soon to be 5 valve Lignatone/Amati Eb
Blokepiece Solo
- bloke
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
UPDATE:
Eva (at Miraphone) to the rescue !!!
They have a nice USED rotor assembly (the very size I need) that they are offering to sell me.
Eva (at Miraphone) to the rescue !!!
They have a nice USED rotor assembly (the very size I need) that they are offering to sell me.
Aaoo Koay, Moate... Oeei haope it resonites...Casca Grossa wrote: If I were you, do not get this silver plated too thickly. A 6th valve plus too much silver will cause the horn not to resonate.
- bloke
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- bloke
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
I got my (hopefully, final revision of my) order sent off yesterday.
I scanned my own hand-written chicken-scratch, and Ms. Eva is having to deal with it.
I tried to buy a long (like 120 -150 mm long) piece of nickel finger-paddle hinge tubing from them, but they only make it 40mm long...so I'll get that elsewhere...or drill my own on my crappy lathe.
I scanned my own hand-written chicken-scratch, and Ms. Eva is having to deal with it.
I tried to buy a long (like 120 -150 mm long) piece of nickel finger-paddle hinge tubing from them, but they only make it 40mm long...so I'll get that elsewhere...or drill my own on my crappy lathe.
- bloke
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
If I had taken all of the advice ever given to me (regarding my various instruments) to "leave well-enough alone", they would all only be (well...) well-enough.
The easiest thing in the world to tell someone else is that they and/or their stuff is "good enough".
bloke "A little joke in our per-service orchestra low brass section (whenever one of us has a solo or soli line without the rest of us) is to ask that person, 'so...Are you goin' with that...??' "
- bloke
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
A 4+2 system is really great, as long as a tubas' various circuits' overtone series are all well in-tune with themselves (ie. no slide-pulling required).
That having been said, there are still two thumbs available (possibly, for #1 and #5 slide triggers).
That having been said, there are still two thumbs available (possibly, for #1 and #5 slide triggers).
- LeMark
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Re: NEVER enough valves on a rotary instrument !!!
wow, that looks amazing. honestly, if I had a 6 valve tuba, I think I would rather have a 5+1 instead of 4+2, but I'm sure others would disagree
Yep, I'm Mark