1933 large bore King + 1926 Buescher (19" recording bell)
Posted: Sat Sep 02, 2023 1:51 pm
After driving all over creation yesterday (well, all over Massachusetts, which has enough traffic for the rest of creation), I picked up these two silver, interwar-era, MTS-before-the-valvesets, recording bell, front-action, three-valve B-flats.
First is a ~1933 pre-1240 model King with a large bore of approx. .750". It has a 21.5" recording bell, pristine valves, and a botched receiver/brace repair. Despite that, it's a great player. I eventually unwrapped the electrical tape on the first valve circuit, fearing a hole, but I think it was just put there for comfort or protection, like a leather wrap. Valves show virtually no plating wear and all tuning slides move, but there is a fair bit of lime buildup, and I still need to get the bottom caps off.
Note that unlike a 1240, which is it very similar to otherwise, it has the tuning slide before the valveset. The angle of the recording bell is also a bit more forward-facing by a few degrees.
(I actually have a mid-1960s King 1240 here as well, and I'll make another post about the differences.)
(^^ I love this brace, for some reason.)
(^^ solder glob city, plus a broken brace)
Next up is a 1926 Buescher with a single MTS before the valves and a 19" recording bell. This thing is in great shape! A few dings and dents, and someone got creative with reattaching the lyre holder, but all slides work, including the goofy extra loop in the 3rd valve tubing that has a tiny slide in it. The valves on this one aren't as good, with a little bit more wear, but slides all still have pretty good pop. I was interested in how LONG this recording bell is. It's also one of the smallest recording bells I've seen, but I know Buescher made smaller ones. Reminds me of a phonograph bell or something. It's a good player. The bell needs a bit of straightening out, but the body is in great shape with no busted braces or anything.
(^^ nice repair to the lyre holder)
Here they are side-by-side:
Cool tubas!
First is a ~1933 pre-1240 model King with a large bore of approx. .750". It has a 21.5" recording bell, pristine valves, and a botched receiver/brace repair. Despite that, it's a great player. I eventually unwrapped the electrical tape on the first valve circuit, fearing a hole, but I think it was just put there for comfort or protection, like a leather wrap. Valves show virtually no plating wear and all tuning slides move, but there is a fair bit of lime buildup, and I still need to get the bottom caps off.
Note that unlike a 1240, which is it very similar to otherwise, it has the tuning slide before the valveset. The angle of the recording bell is also a bit more forward-facing by a few degrees.
(I actually have a mid-1960s King 1240 here as well, and I'll make another post about the differences.)
(^^ I love this brace, for some reason.)
(^^ solder glob city, plus a broken brace)
Next up is a 1926 Buescher with a single MTS before the valves and a 19" recording bell. This thing is in great shape! A few dings and dents, and someone got creative with reattaching the lyre holder, but all slides work, including the goofy extra loop in the 3rd valve tubing that has a tiny slide in it. The valves on this one aren't as good, with a little bit more wear, but slides all still have pretty good pop. I was interested in how LONG this recording bell is. It's also one of the smallest recording bells I've seen, but I know Buescher made smaller ones. Reminds me of a phonograph bell or something. It's a good player. The bell needs a bit of straightening out, but the body is in great shape with no busted braces or anything.
(^^ nice repair to the lyre holder)
Here they are side-by-side:
Cool tubas!