TubaTinker wrote:Donn.... there is no 'choke point' in either the receiver image I posted earlier or the one that Conn/Selmer is selling as a replacement. That shank taper runs all the way to where the leadpipe begins.
That means there
is a choke point, no? The leadpipe is theoretically tapered per conical horn, so the two pieces have the opposite taper. If the tapers extend all the way to the joint, that's a narrow point.
And yes.... the ID of the end of the leadpipe on your King is (and should be) a bit greater than 1/2".
So the .490 shank that went in 1¾ inches has clearly passed the end of the taper, which
must end before it gets down to .500 - maybe a little past the normal 1 inch insertion, but not much.
The receiver is 2½ inches long, so the leadpipe inserts well over 1 inch into the receiver? I don't have a dental pick, but with whatever I have on hand for a probe, I feel that joint where you said I would, about 2 inches in - over an inch past the end of the taper. That's why I'm saying, the taper doesn't go from one end of the receiver to the other - it couldn't, or I think it would end up around .468. It stops a little past 1 inch. If your surmise about the .534 leadpipe ID applies to mine as well, it would have to be counter-tapered from the less-than-.520 narrow ID to meet the leadpipe.
I measured the new style King receiver and the counterbore that the leadpipe to fits into is .574". The diameter at the bottom of the taper inside the receiver is .520". Most leadpipes have a wall thickness of about .020". Assuming the leadpipe just fits into that .574" counterbore and has a wall thickness of about .020", the ID of the small end of the leadpipe would be about .534"... or slightly larger than most tuba shanks.
Weird. So doesn't that mean that it's straight, past the taper? Yours must be .530 at about 1 inch, right? Morse taper from there would get to .520 in less than a quarter inch? That would account for why the OP's standard shank was totally swallowed, though.