A BBb helicon has been on my wishlist for some time. Recently a 4 valve King raincatcher came along which was so nice that I couldn't pass it up (thanks Mark!). I found a King bell/Miraphone stack that had all of the right dimensions to graft it onto the raincatcher (thanks Dan!).
After fabricating a tenon to fit the raincatcher, voilà, a helicatcher. er, rainicon?
The nice thing is that this all worked with zero modifications to the raincatcher (one of the prerequisite for the project).
American sailboats, airplanes, banjos, guitars and flutes ...
Italian motorcycles and cars ...
German cameras and tubas ...
Life is Good.
That's pretty nifty - especially since you kept the raincatcher all original. My only thought would be that all the BBb helicons I've seen (including my current one) have a pretty hefty brace for bell support so you might not want to leave the helicon bell section on when you're not using it.
tofu wrote:..... My only thought would be that all the BBb helicons I've seen (including my current one) have a pretty hefty brace for bell support so you might not want to leave the helicon bell section on when you're not using it.
I do not have a 'brace' on my custom helicon, either. I got around the hazard of the bell falling off by using bell screws with pilots on them that engage holes in the bell tenon. I told Tom about this feature and assume he has done the same thing with his bell. My bell gets 'thrashed around' pretty good at Volksfest and hasn't budged.
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.
tofu wrote:..... My only thought would be that all the BBb helicons I've seen (including my current one) have a pretty hefty brace for bell support so you might not want to leave the helicon bell section on when you're not using it.
I do not have a 'brace' on my custom helicon, either. I got around the hazard of the bell falling off by using bell screws with pilots on them that engage holes in the bell tenon. I told Tom about this feature and assume he has done the same thing with his bell. My bell gets 'thrashed around' pretty good at Volksfest and hasn't budged.
Yes Dan I did that and appreciate the suggestion. My original idea had been to solder a brace to the stack and fabricate a sort of half-ferrule, glue part of a leather guitar strap inside it and simply let it rest on the 2nd branch. Your idea is much simpler and seems very solid.
Thanks again!
American sailboats, airplanes, banjos, guitars and flutes ...
Italian motorcycles and cars ...
German cameras and tubas ...
Life is Good.
Tuba Guy wrote:All of the sousaphones I've ever gone near have been convertibles. I mean, all you have to do is unscrew 3 screws and you can easily take the top off
Yeah. But.... they play in 'B' when you do that!
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.