goodgigs wrote:What a bunch of ----------------
I HATE THIS TOPIC I've flown My tuba arround the world two and a half
times. Not just the plastic ones either! I took My 1931 B&F to China.
I took the other brass one to Europe and the caribian AND YES they got some damage. My plastic ones were a special thing so I guess they don't count. BUT ULTAMITALY - GET OVER IT THEY CAN BE FIXED !!
IF you order a Cervany they will sent you TWO boxers one with a case in it (empty) and the other SINGLE LAYER cardboard box with only bubble rap packing penuts and the tuba. these tubas are known to be extreamly thin and dent prone but that's how the manufacturer does it.
So If I sound uncareing it's because I just don't believe in prety tubas - to me it's all about the sound. (It's just a tool)
Yes, I agree. But...if the tuba is in the case, it cannot be adequately bubble-wrapped. If you want to do it the way Cervany (and others) ship - then you need to ship two boxes. The case is a no-brainer, but the tuba should be so wrapped in bubble-wrap that you can't tell from the shape that it's a tuba - just a huge ball of bubble-wrap.
For one-time shipping to a customer, this works. For a tour of the East Coast states looking for a job, that's too much wrapping and unwrapping (and the expense of shipping TWO boxes on every leg).
I tend to agree with the attitude: "do the best you can, and accept the fact that things get broken/wear out/degrade with use and travel". But...some people like smooth shiny things - and need them to work withOUT an emergency trip to the shop.
It comes down to schedule vs. safety.