Sousaphone mystery - would love your insights
Posted: Fri Aug 15, 2014 8:03 am
Dear TubeNetters - and esp. you technician/repair folks,
My son brought home one of his high school's old Sousaphones for us to clean-up and get into decent playing shape for the new marching band season. It's a post-1985 King, and perhaps built not much later than that (looks like it's got a lot of miles on it!).
When we were cleaning the valves, we discovered that the first valve casing has a third valve in it - the very same valve that is in the third valve casing, and marked with the same "3" at the top of it (so instead of the valves showing "1, 2, 3," they show "3, 2, 3").
We figured the horn would sound horrible, and perhaps not play at all. But to our great surprise, it plays fairly well!
I double-checked, visually confirming that the valve in the first casing looks identical to the valve in the third casing, and the holes in the valve don't quite line up with the holes in the first valve casing. I'm guessing they line up enough to make things work, though.
Any thoughts on this, those of you who work with Sousaphones?
And after checking the other three school horns for a possible "1, 2, 1" mix-up (they all had "1, 2, 3"), we're wondering if perhaps the valve has been wrong since the horn was purchased by the school all those years ago. Would it be worth bringing this up with Conn-Selmer (they handle Kings now, right?), to see how we could get the correct valve?
Thanks for any thoughts on all of this.
My son brought home one of his high school's old Sousaphones for us to clean-up and get into decent playing shape for the new marching band season. It's a post-1985 King, and perhaps built not much later than that (looks like it's got a lot of miles on it!).
When we were cleaning the valves, we discovered that the first valve casing has a third valve in it - the very same valve that is in the third valve casing, and marked with the same "3" at the top of it (so instead of the valves showing "1, 2, 3," they show "3, 2, 3").
We figured the horn would sound horrible, and perhaps not play at all. But to our great surprise, it plays fairly well!
I double-checked, visually confirming that the valve in the first casing looks identical to the valve in the third casing, and the holes in the valve don't quite line up with the holes in the first valve casing. I'm guessing they line up enough to make things work, though.
Any thoughts on this, those of you who work with Sousaphones?
And after checking the other three school horns for a possible "1, 2, 1" mix-up (they all had "1, 2, 3"), we're wondering if perhaps the valve has been wrong since the horn was purchased by the school all those years ago. Would it be worth bringing this up with Conn-Selmer (they handle Kings now, right?), to see how we could get the correct valve?
Thanks for any thoughts on all of this.