Sear Mouthpices
- Chuck(G)
- 6 valves

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- windshieldbug
- Once got the "hand" as a cue

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- Lew
- 5 valves

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- Location: Annville, PA
I too had one of these that came with a sousaphone I bought. I never used it so I sold it, but I wasn't aware that it was solid nickel-silver. Now that you mention it, it did have that dull nickel -silver look rather than the shiny silver look. Since nickel-silver is really just a brass alloy, are there any issues with playing on it vs. a silver or gold plated mouthpiece?windshieldbug wrote:I have a Sear-Helleberg mouthpiece that was given to me by my teacher, which was made from solid nickle-silver.
This is the only "Sear" brand mouthpiece of which I am aware. Walter Sear still runs Sear Sound studios in NYC, so it there's a specific mouthpiece you've seen you could write to him and ask him about it.
http://members.aol.com/searsound/
- windshieldbug
- Once got the "hand" as a cue

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None that I experienced, and I used it for about 2 years. I believe the earliest brasswind mouthpieces were similarly constructed. I certainly have a large number of NS's from the 19th century.Lew wrote: Since nickel-silver is really just a brass alloy, are there any issues with playing on it vs. a silver or gold plated mouthpiece?
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
- Ricko
- bugler

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