I first heard one of these tubas played in the Leningrad Orchestra in the latter 1970's, and it was not nickel-plated. I think it was raw brass. The player got a rather intense, very dark sound.
In defense of the purveyors of these instrument in the United States, they have provided these instruments at the request of tuba players that are always looking for a less-expensive instrument. Well, here it is, and many people/school systems have bought them, so the seller is completely vindicated. If the majority of American tuba players were willing and able to readily spend $10,000-15,000 on a tuba, every music store in the country would stock tubas. So, there you have it.
The earlier St. Pete models, including the ones I saw in Europe, were quite primitive in construction, particularly the valves. This has been corrected, and the price has correspondingly escalated. Good workmanship always costs more, because it takes better materials and more work, both of which cost more.
I will venture to say that the newest St. Petersburg tubas can be shop-adjusted and serviced to the point that they can play quite well. If one plans to purchase a St. Petersburg tuba, consult your repair technician, so that you can add his estimate for prepping the instrument to the purchase price, to determine the real cost of one in excellent mechanical condition.
I will also say that the Tuba Exchange has been very good about supplying parts when I have needed to work on a St. Petersburg, and that older models can be upgraded with newer parts.
With proper cleaning and prepping, the valves on a modern St. Pete will work as well as a Cerveny or some other well-known brands. One concern of mine is the very large bore of the instrument, which is too much for most people with less than a 7.5 liter lung capacity. As always, one needs to play-test and carefully consider any purchase.
Different (?) St. Petersburg question
- iiipopes
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I will say this in defense of the St Pete: he's right about the broad, dark tone. The retrofit upright St Pete bell on my detachable bell 186 has turned it from a good all-round tuba into an intense dark, pervasive beast that belies it's standard 4/4 size, almost Alex-ish, to the delight of all the directors I play under.
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- Dan Schultz
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I know my post doesn't deal with your original question regarding the availability of the St. Pete in lacquer.... but....
I've always heard that St. Pete owners usually love the horn or hate it. I've never had one in the shop until yesterday. It's less than two years old. The problem wasn't the fault of the horn. The horn simply sat too long without attention and three of the four rotors were locked up. Someone wrenched the solder joint on the upper paddle bar brace trying to force things to work. There wasn't any serious damage done and after fixing the brace and giving the horn a good chem-clean and lube, it was ready to play again. So... I took it to my community band tonight and gave it a toot. I have to say that I'm impressed with the horn. Intonation and response was much better than I expected. It's a 202N. I'm not a big fan of the nickel, but the horn DOES look and sound good at the moment.
I've always heard that St. Pete owners usually love the horn or hate it. I've never had one in the shop until yesterday. It's less than two years old. The problem wasn't the fault of the horn. The horn simply sat too long without attention and three of the four rotors were locked up. Someone wrenched the solder joint on the upper paddle bar brace trying to force things to work. There wasn't any serious damage done and after fixing the brace and giving the horn a good chem-clean and lube, it was ready to play again. So... I took it to my community band tonight and gave it a toot. I have to say that I'm impressed with the horn. Intonation and response was much better than I expected. It's a 202N. I'm not a big fan of the nickel, but the horn DOES look and sound good at the moment.
Dan Schultz
"The Village Tinker"
http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
"The Village Tinker"
http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
- bort
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Re: Different (?) St. Petersburg question
Maybe they just make more nickel plated ones?Dave M wrote:I've read many posts on St. Petersburg tubas and now and then entertain the idea of getting one. I've noticed that although they're often discussed and seen for sale, I'm not sure I've ever seen a lacquered one, the 202 L, discussed or up for sale, except the new ones on TE website.
Why doesn't anybody seem to buy the lacquered ones?
Cheers,
Dave
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bigbear19
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I played on a st pete for 3 years in high school. I played everything from basic band pieces to Hungarian march, symphony fantastique, and petrushka. Overall it was a good horn for the level i was at. I bought a pt 7 as a senior and i have never looked back. If I had to say yes or no I would say you can do A LOT BETTER for the same amount of money...Hope this helps.
- Lew
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Re: Different (?) St. Petersburg question
I think that the answer to this question is that the lacquered versions were not offered by the Tuba Exchange until recently. How recently I'm not sure, but I do seem to remember seeing only nickel plated ones as recently as a year and a half ago. Since they are the exclusive distributor in the US the only lacquered ones you would have seen are those purchased outside of the US including both relatively recent and older ones.Dave M wrote:I've read many posts on St. Petersburg tubas and now and then entertain the idea of getting one. I've noticed that although they're often discussed and seen for sale, I'm not sure I've ever seen a lacquered one, the 202 L, discussed or up for sale, except the new ones on TE website.
Why doesn't anybody seem to buy the lacquered ones?
Cheers,
Dave
I suspect that you will see more lacquered ones now that they are available, even though they are the same price as nickel plated. So, I don't think it's that nobody buys the lacquered ones, just that the nickel ones have been available so much longer that they are the predominant finish that you will see.
- iiipopes
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With all due respect, and from personal experience with different mouthpieces, the bore is not the only characteristic that affects air requirements; mouthpiece cup, throat and backbore geometry have as much or more to do with air requirements. After the throat or venturi, the widening of the backbore into the leadpipe and the rest of the horn drops the pressure and transforms the action of the horn from the Bernoulli principle of the air transitioning the embouchure to get vibrations going to static wave theory for the horn to resonate. One particular example: my Wick 1L, with its really deep cup, .332 throat and really open backbore just suck me dry on my 186, while the Curry, with its modified funnel cup, .325 throat and different backbore gives me just enough resistance to really help me manage my air support.sbring wrote:Confirmed. I have about 5 litres left, and it's hard work.Lee Stofer wrote:One concern of mine is the very large bore of the instrument, which is too much for most people with less than a 7.5 liter lung capacity.
Sven
But I agree bore, or at least the geometry of the valve block, does have a lot to do with it. My Wick 1 into my Besson has about the same perceived resistance, and therefore helps me manage my breath, about the same as the Curry into the 186. So go figure!
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- Wyvern
- Wessex Tubas

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- SplatterTone
- 5 valves

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Recently, I replaced the bumpers on the 191 with the replacement eraser stuff that goes into those mechanical pencils with the twist-up eraser. It's working OK, so far.now switched to neoprene. So far so good.
Good signature lines: http://tinyurl.com/a47spm
