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Re: Dating my BAT

Postby TubaRay » Sun Jun 03, 2012 10:49 am

imperialbari wrote:
Something has been completely misunderstood!.jpg

Hilarious, and totally "on topic."
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Re: Dating my BAT

Postby Dean E » Sun Jun 03, 2012 11:07 pm

imperialbari wrote:
The attachment Something has been completely misunderstood!.jpg is no longer available

And when you run out of lubricants, they are in aisle 15. :twisted:
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Re: Dating my BAT

Postby TubadudeCA » Mon Jun 04, 2012 1:41 am

Here are some pics. Hope these will work!

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Re: Dating my BAT

Postby imperialbari » Mon Jun 04, 2012 2:10 am

Looks old to me. Definitely not after the fall of the wall in 1989. Between WWII and the reunification West German instruments were marked Made in Western Germany. From this and from the flareless bell I would say pre-WWII. Wouldn’t at all be surprised if it was from around 1900.

String action is an American invention known from CW-era instruments. I am not sure when that transmission was introduced in Germany.

The paddles puzzle me, as they are very different from Alexander’s paddles for tubas with S-links, but then they are not unlike Alexander’s horn paddles. Also somewhat like King’s paddles for their rotary tubas from before WWII.

The scans in my Yahoo-based galleries are from much newer Alexander catalogues:

http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/YorkMasterPublicPhotosIII/files/%20%20Index%20in%20.htm%20format/

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Re: Dating my BAT

Postby Rick Denney » Mon Jun 04, 2012 9:26 am

imperialbari wrote:Between WWII and the reunification West German instruments were marked Made in Western Germany.


Not relevant here, but "Made in Western Germany" was never an official mark, though it was commonly used. It was the first incarnation of the desire for manufacturers in the U.S., French, and British occupation areas of post-war Germany to distinguish themselves from "inferior" manufacturing in the Soviet occupation zone. Thus, it would have started around 1950--Germany was divided into occupation zones in 1949. "Made in Western Germany" morphed into "Made in West Germany" fairly early in that period, but it happened variously depending on the manufacturer. There are no products imported into the U.S. that say "Made in East Germany", though that marking was apparently used. In most cases, the Soviets wanted to emphasize that East Germany was its own country (while those in the west insisted it was still part of Germany under Soviet occupation). So, most items made in East Germany are marked "Made in the German Democratic Republic" or "Made in G.D.R" or "Made in D.D.R."

In this case, the fact that it is marked "Made in Germany" tells me that it was exported either to the United States or to the UK. If exported to the UK, it must post-date 1887, which was when the British established country-of-origin marking requirements for products made in Germany. That requirement was not established in the United States until Tariff Act of 1930. (The McKinley Tariff Act of 1890 is sometimes credited for country-of-origin labeling requirements, but in fact it did not require it. Products made for export to any English-speaking country, however, probably included the marking.)

So, that does not refute Klaus's guess that this one was made around the turn of the last century.

But I rather think it was made a bit later. Instruments like this were never popular in the UK and I rather doubt that many German kaiser tubas found their way there until modern times--by which time Alexander would have been making S-linkages. The paddle arrangement is very similar to a pre-war King 1290, though the bell is more like the standard pre-war German kaiser tuba. If this one was made between the wars for export to the U.S., King might well have gone to school on it for its own model. The similarity in the configuration of the mechanism suggests someone went to school. It's not impossible that Alexander was copying the King configuration in order to appeal to the American market--as bad as it was in the U.S. during the Depression, it was worse in Germany.

There is that famous etching of the 1872 Cerveny Kaiser that Bevan included in his book, with a fairly similar configuration and even less bell flare. But I'm still feeling that this one was made between the wars. Pre-WWI tubas from the Bohemia vicinity used medallions, as I recall, rather than engraving directly on the bell, which was more common with American instruments. But that may be based on having seen too small a sample. Klaus can probably confirm or refute my suppositions.

If the instrument plays a touch flat, or needs the slide to be pushed aggressively in, then it was probably made before 1939, when A-440 was adopted as an international standard. Before that, most European orchestras used diapason normal, which was A-435. Many American instruments from that era need to be trimmed a bit (viz. the famous story of Renold Schilke pulling a hacksaw out of his locker and "adjusting" the main slide on Arnold Jacobs's York tuba).

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Re: Dating my BAT

Postby TubaTinker » Mon Jun 04, 2012 1:07 pm

Rick Denney wrote:.... The paddle arrangement is very similar to a pre-war King 1290, though the bell is more like the standard pre-war German kaiser tuba. If this one was made between the wars for export to the U.S., King might well have gone to school on it for its own model. The similarity in the configuration of the mechanism suggests someone went to school. It's not impossible that Alexander was copying the King configuration in order to appeal to the American market--as bad as it was in the U.S. during the Depression, it was worse in Germany....


King has been mentioned twice in this thread. I have one of those rotary Kings (a 'pit' model) and it's quite clear that King had nothing to do with the manufacture of the rotors, which are obviously of European origin.

At this point... if I had to 'guess'... I think the rotors on the Kings were probably manufactured by the same folks who made the Alex valves.
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Re: Dating my BAT

Postby J.c. Sherman » Mon Jun 04, 2012 4:58 pm

This is definitely not a 164... it's much too old, and the bell flare and other items (including style elements from similar Alexander Horns) puts the date around 1925-1930 if my Alex-o-philia is correct. Could be a bit earlier, but that's my sense from all the factors here.

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Re: Dating my BAT

Postby TubadudeCA » Mon Jun 04, 2012 10:09 pm

The general consensus seems to be that it is before WWII, so the 1925-1930 estimate seems like a good bet to me. Now that I've taken some time to look at other photos, the paddles really ARE odd! Maybe somebody disliked the traditional Alex buttons and had them replaced? :tuba:

Also, can anyone give me a ballpark figure of what it may be worth?
1948 H.N. White Trombonium
1936 H.N. White Baritone
1911 H.N. White EEb Helicon
1896 Henry Distin EEB Tuba
19XX Sherman Clay & CO. EEb Sousaphone
1970 Conn 20J BBb Tuba- FOR SALE
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Re: Dating my BAT

Postby KiltieTuba » Mon Jun 04, 2012 11:59 pm

TubadudeCA wrote:The general consensus seems to be that it is before WWII, so the 1925-1930 estimate seems like a good bet to me. Now that I've taken some time to look at other photos, the paddles really ARE odd! Maybe somebody disliked the traditional Alex buttons and had them replaced? :tuba:

Also, can anyone give me a ballpark figure of what it may be worth?


How much did you buy it for?
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Re: Dating my BAT

Postby TubadudeCA » Tue Jun 05, 2012 12:40 am

KiltieTuba wrote:
TubadudeCA wrote:The general consensus seems to be that it is before WWII, so the 1925-1930 estimate seems like a good bet to me. Now that I've taken some time to look at other photos, the paddles really ARE odd! Maybe somebody disliked the traditional Alex buttons and had them replaced? :tuba:

Also, can anyone give me a ballpark figure of what it may be worth?


How much did you buy it for?


$100
1948 H.N. White Trombonium
1936 H.N. White Baritone
1911 H.N. White EEb Helicon
1896 Henry Distin EEB Tuba
19XX Sherman Clay & CO. EEb Sousaphone
1970 Conn 20J BBb Tuba- FOR SALE
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Re: Dating my BAT

Postby KiltieTuba » Tue Jun 05, 2012 12:43 am

TubadudeCA wrote:
KiltieTuba wrote:
TubadudeCA wrote:The general consensus seems to be that it is before WWII, so the 1925-1930 estimate seems like a good bet to me. Now that I've taken some time to look at other photos, the paddles really ARE odd! Maybe somebody disliked the traditional Alex buttons and had them replaced? :tuba:

Also, can anyone give me a ballpark figure of what it may be worth?


How much did you buy it for?


$100


Well that's a good starting point!
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Re: Dating my BAT

Postby TubadudeCA » Tue Jun 05, 2012 12:51 am

Well that's a good starting point![/quote]

I sure think so! But the reason for me wanting to know of the value, is me trying to figure out if I should insure it. Never in my life do I ever plan to sell it.
1948 H.N. White Trombonium
1936 H.N. White Baritone
1911 H.N. White EEb Helicon
1896 Henry Distin EEB Tuba
19XX Sherman Clay & CO. EEb Sousaphone
1970 Conn 20J BBb Tuba- FOR SALE
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