
Anyway, Daniel was a great person to deal with. Everything he wrote about the horn is true. He is communicative, and he had the tuba CLEANED before he sold it! A mark of a great seller, and all around great person. Wouldn't hesitate to do business with him again.
What this tuba is:
CC
4V
Old(ish) - Serial dates it to 1984
4.5/4ish? Certainly larger than the Eastman 632 or 832/King 2341
Those of you that have played Marzan or B&M tubas know what they are. Truthfully, it plays really well. No, it is not perfect. Yes, I have to pull on that main slide. But, it's moving like a trombone slide. I'm kind of digging that design. What a great idea! The CC's need it more than the BBb's. I've played on 3 or 4 Marzans with both piston/rotary valves, and the BBb's are certainly more in-tune than the CC's.
However, it's fine. It's easier to play than my Holton 6/4. More agile, quicker response. Duh. It's 2 feet shorter and way smaller. It also seems to slot easier than the big guy. But it doesn't give that Earth shaking presence that only the big tubas get.
What I like about this tuba, playing it today, about 2 or 3 hours, are these things:
Design. I love that main tuning slide on top. Again, the CC's need it, but they aren't as bad as you may think. Open pitches are good.
Ergonomics: Every 4/4 I've played has been too short to comfortably play. These Marzans/B&Ms being bigger, mean the mouthpipes are mounted higher than comparable models. See my comparison below.
Sound: These make a really nice sound. There's a nice 'zip' to it that I really like. Not "bland" at all. Take that as you will.
Quality: These are made well. This one could use a few things, but really nothing major. Nothing I'll do anytime soon, either.
What this tuba needs:
A new bag. The bag it came with is, well, it's seen better days. No big deal. I don't think this will be leaving the house much, but maybe I'll treat it to a nice Miraphone bag or a used Cronkhite someday. Someone else will probably be playing this more than I will.
Slide stop on the main slide: It used to have one. It would be nice to put one back on it. Right now I tied some paracord string to it and made a makeshift stop. It works.
Very minor solder work: Solder didn't make it to the ends of the first slide inner brace. I don't really care right now. Just noticed it.
Yamaha springs: Already ordered. I put them in all my tubas. Right now the valves are heavy feeling.
One other thing: The mouthpipe. This is the large pipe, and it is removable. Cool, nice for cleaning, the tuba plays well with this pipe. I went through my entire mouthpiece "library" of Euro, American, and P shanks, various cups, rims, models, and settled on my Parker Titan with a modified Helleberg rim. It's a smaller mouthpiece that I use on my Willson F as well. Of the pieces I have, I like it the best.
That's all. I like the horn. Simple, no nonsense C tuba. W-A-Y more desirable to me than the cheap Chinese 186 clones, and put together better at that.
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Mouthpipe height is just about the same. Love it.