I trust that your original 321 leadpipe's in good condition.
It so, just order a Weril H980 receiver--forget the leadpipe. The Weril receiver is sized for a leadpipe end just a tad smaller than the Yamaha, so you may need to slightly enlarge the Weril part. This lets you keep the original leadpipe on the Yamaha (and avoid messing up the finish by replacing it). If done carefully, the alteration won't be visible to the naked (or fully dressed, for that matter) eye.
Yamaha 321S Leadpipe Replacement
- Chuck(G)
- 6 valves
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- Chuck(G)
- 6 valves
- Posts: 5679
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 12:48 am
- Location: Not out of the woods yet.
- Contact:
How (and why) would a larger bore leadpipe do anything? How would you match an overlarge leadpipe to the valve set, all of whose branches are the same old small bore? I can imagine that a leadpipe with a different taper might have a definitie effect, but a leadpipe still has to start at the receiver and match up at the first valve...KJ wrote:Would there be no benefit to installing a larger leadpipe? I find the horn to be less than free blowing at times and am looking for a reasonable solution without having to upgrade to a new horn...can't really afford to do that right now.
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- pro musician
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- 4 valves
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I may just be stating the obvious, but I'd suggest making sure that the present equipment is clean (a little internal slime film can affect the blowing resistance), and make sure that the valves are properly aligned. A properly-functioning YEP-321 should be quite free-blowing, indeed.
Lee A. Stofer, Jr.