fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy job

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Tabor
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by Tabor »

Like.
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Biggs
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by Biggs »

1.) Is that a Besson Stratford?

If answer to 1.) is "yes" then

2.) do you have another case of similar size and condition, to perform the exact same function as this one, that you would part with for the right sum?

If answer to 2.) is "yes" then

PM me with "the right sum" (you'd know better than I) and, suddenly, I'll have an Independence Day present for myself. I don't have a sob story...but I do have a grandma, if that helps.
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by Biggs »

bloke wrote:no more little cases...
...but - if I sold stuff like that off (for about the money it's worth to box it up), I wouldn't have it to give away with crappy little tubas. :lol:

:arrow: If I see one on eBay, I'll send you a p.m. and a link. :wink:
:D
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by MikeMason »

I was disappointed with the ending to your story. I just knew little Johnny and his parents turned their nose up to it,told grandma you had robbed her,and reported you to the bbb :mrgreen:
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The Big Ben
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by The Big Ben »

It looks pretty good. If the kid can't sound good, it's not the horn's fault. You're a good man, Bloke...
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edsel585960
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by edsel585960 »

Why not post it. You did someone a good turn. :)
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by Arthur »

Nice work Bloke
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by Heavy_Metal »

700 series? 2-20?
Principal tuba, Bel Air Community Band
Old (early 1900s?) Alexander BBb proto-163
1976 Sonora (B&S 101) 4-rotor BBb
1964 Conn 20J/21J BBb (one body, both bells)
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Art Hovey
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by Art Hovey »

700 = Stratford = 2-20 ? -Is there a difference?
Good little tubas!
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Rev Rob
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by Rev Rob »

After what I have been seeing and reading today, you renew my faith in humanity Bloke, even though you may be ever so humble as to admit it. Job well done.
Beginning again to be a tuba player.
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by Three Valves »

MikeMason wrote:I was disappointed with the ending to your story. I just knew little Johnny and his parents turned their nose up to it,told grandma you had robbed her,and reported you to the bbb :mrgreen:
:lol:
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by Lee Stofer »

I would not refer to your work here as doing a "crappy" job, but doing a budget job. Not everyone can afford the expensive job, so this is meeting customers at the point where they live, and doing a job that both you and they can live with. Sure, repair technicians like to show off the expensive job that they have worked themselves half to death over for weeks, but because of how much labor and other expenses that went into that job, they are rarely as profitable as doing the ordinary, mundane jobs that pay the rent.

I have told people that I could double my revenue if I had an endless supply of student-grade trombones and trumpets to clean and service, but I'd also start to go mad after a few weeks of endless trumpet and trombone servicings.

I hope the young student enjoys the 700-series Besson.
Lee A. Stofer, Jr.
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ThomasDodd
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by ThomasDodd »

bloke wrote: solder joints? - a little messy...wiped clean/solid
dent removal? - "good enough"
finish? - "Ha!"
replaced corks/felts? - They didn't need it. :|

Just like "not all playing gigs", "not all repair gigs" are "things about which to post on the web"...just as this was not. :P
You forgot the before shots to show just how bad off it was.
Lee Stofer wrote:I would not refer to your work here as doing a "crappy" job, but doing a budget job.
I sure wish "budget jobs" were done more often in all areas.

I often have 3 choices: $$$ high end version, cheap DIY, or nothing.
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by Heavy_Metal »

bloke wrote:What I "like" about them is the way that they pack a punch with a 13" bell ("secret" = full-size .689" bore...but nothing more than "economy of parts"...same tubing they use[d] on their comp.-Eb's).
They do indeed. I brought my 787 to rehearsal the last time The Section had Alternate Tuba Night (MW32, 787, Piggy instead of the three Alexanders). It astonished everyone, including me- we all thought no one would hear it. Of course, with those horns we weren't anywhere near as powerful as with the Alexanders, and it was a bit harder to get our intonation squared away, but that little tuba's output was a pleasant surprise. AFAIK there was never a 4-valve version- that would have been interesting.

I keep thinking I should sell mine, since the Mahillon is now my small tuba, but something keeps telling me not to.
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Re: fixing and selling crappy little tubas & doing a crappy

Post by aqualung »

Biggs wrote: do you have another case of similar size and condition, to perform the exact same function as this one, that you would part with for the right sum?
I have a good newer Besson molded plastic case which fits my Besson 2-20 BBb. The horn is 31½" tall. I could sell this case.

And I have a B&H Imperial Eb Bass which I believe is the same horn as the Stafford. The horn is 33½ tall, and does not fit the smaller case. It does fit in a Yamaha YEB-321 case, which I can't sell. Although I might swap it for a wheelie bag.

FWIW, a Yamaha YEB-103 will fit in a Getzen contra case with about 1/100" to spare.
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