Well, I went up to Buckeye Brass and Winds last week and tried their 4 valve Piggy...they had sold the 5 valve they had a few days before I got there. Rob Phillips and Shawn were both very accommodating and helpful. Buckeye is a good place to try horns because it is in a converted church, so there is no need to wonder what the horn is going to sound like in a bigger space.
As far as sound is concerned, I loved the horn. IDK whether I should call it a more mellow sound than the 410 or darker, but it is definitely very colorful and absolutely beautiful. The lower register opens up more than the 410 and is very strong. The middle and upper registers are very nice, too. The horn sounded great to me below the bell and also sounded about the same when I got Rob to play it and stepped away from it in a large room. I did find that there were some intonation quirks, but didn't note where exactly they were...some in the middle of the staff, a few low notes. I didn't take note of the exact notes because I just wondered how I would deal with several pitches that I couldn't quite seem to lip into tune. They weren't that far out, maybe 10 or 15 cents, but I didn't have the skills to deal with them.
The other thing that was a surprise to me was how open the horn was. I felt very little resistance and ran out of air about three quarter notes before the end of phrases I can play easily on my 410. I'm not exactly sure whether I was using too much air and playing too loudly or not. I have to say that I don't, at 75 y/o and out of shape, have the lung capacity of a typical middle aged tuba player, who might handle the Piggy just fine.
I'd have to commit to a serious fitness program to lose fat and increase endurance before I could consider the Piggy. YMWV.
As I said, Rob and Shawn were very helpful and I will visit them again if I find another of their horns that I want to try. Rob says that he has an order from Cerveny scheduled to arrive soon, so there will be a lot more horns to try soon.
royjohn
