
14K sousaphone
- CTAYLOR
- bugler

- Posts: 74
- Joined: Fri Nov 23, 2007 3:24 am
- Location: Houston, Tx
14K sousaphone
this was my high school horn..a conn 14k. seems like this was the best sousa i ever played..i could get way more sound out of it than a king, OR a conn 20k. this horn was a beast!! just thought i'd share that with ya. 


Conn-Man
- TUbajohn20J
- 4 valves

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- The Jackson
- 5 valves

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- Location: Miami, FL
My school's norm (kind of) sousas are Yamah YHS411's. We have four of them, that four guys, me included, use. We also have one Jupiter 594L, one King student (I don't know model), and 3 new King 2350's (lacquer)
The Yamahas sound pretty decent, but I think they would sound better if they had been taken care of
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v319/ ... y/FBA3.jpg
The Yamahas sound pretty decent, but I think they would sound better if they had been taken care of
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v319/ ... y/FBA3.jpg
- The Jackson
- 5 valves

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- iiipopes
- Utility Infielder

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For your average, every day, get out there and blow, keep on working, low maintenance, sounds great souzy, nothing beats a 14K, especially all the pre-Macmillian ones. I played its predecessor for awhile, a Conn Cavalier, and was always amazed at how I could change its character from a blow away the far side yard markers with a bowl mouthpiece to immenently tubesque for concert band settings with a funnel. Since they are still made, and since there are so many out there, repairs should never be a problem, as any repair person worth his/her tools and significant experience servicing school music programs will have a boatload of "crash parts" to fix mishaps. They have great overall intonation, good "false" pedals, and if you get an older cousin or sibling with the 24 inch bell instead of the standard 26, it's a lot more manueverable.
Regarding Kings, the pre-UMI ones are good. I first started on a first generation King fiberglass, and got used to it pretty quickly. In my experience, both fiberglass and conventional, they need a little deeper mouthpiece, like the original, HN White old-style King 26 (no relation to Bach), but not a funnel, to help them be smooth with their smaller bore: .687 compared to the .734 for the Conn. Also, the bits are different on a King and each is slightly different, so have to be inserted in the right order.
And yes, I say this every time: if possible on your 14K, have your tech convert the upper loop of the 1st valve tubing into a slide you can pull with your left hand. Then you can tune 1st pure, 2nd pure, pull 3 so 2-3 is in tune, and then for 1-2 pull about a half inch or so, 1-3 about an inch to an inch an a quarter, and 123 an inch and a half or a bit more, and everything will be in perfect tune. Since it lays right where your left hand is anyway, you might as well put it to use. Then with the good false pedals, you don't need a 4th valve, saving all the weight.
Regarding Kings, the pre-UMI ones are good. I first started on a first generation King fiberglass, and got used to it pretty quickly. In my experience, both fiberglass and conventional, they need a little deeper mouthpiece, like the original, HN White old-style King 26 (no relation to Bach), but not a funnel, to help them be smooth with their smaller bore: .687 compared to the .734 for the Conn. Also, the bits are different on a King and each is slightly different, so have to be inserted in the right order.
And yes, I say this every time: if possible on your 14K, have your tech convert the upper loop of the 1st valve tubing into a slide you can pull with your left hand. Then you can tune 1st pure, 2nd pure, pull 3 so 2-3 is in tune, and then for 1-2 pull about a half inch or so, 1-3 about an inch to an inch an a quarter, and 123 an inch and a half or a bit more, and everything will be in perfect tune. Since it lays right where your left hand is anyway, you might as well put it to use. Then with the good false pedals, you don't need a 4th valve, saving all the weight.
Jupiter JTU1110
"Real" Conn 36K
"Real" Conn 36K
- Jeffrey Hicks
- 3 valves

- Posts: 327
- Joined: Tue Mar 23, 2004 11:47 am
- Location: NKY
If you do some searching in the archives here you will find that the Conn 14k is the preferred Sousaphone by a lot of us. I find it to be the best playing of any of the sousas out there. One more point. What is with this not carrying a sousa on your left shoulder? I see these bands all the time and their sousa players have the horn in a non playable carrying position. That is ridiculous.
Conn 36K with Mike Finn "H"
- The Jackson
- 5 valves

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It's a position that is used for lax times to give the left shoulder a rest. Some sections have that as their position when they walk on the field, and then in playing position when the band is called the ready. The tubas over here do something like that where we just switch the shoulders. It helps us out a lot.
- Jeffrey Hicks
- 3 valves

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- TUbajohn20J
- 4 valves

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- Jeffrey Hicks
- 3 valves

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- TUbajohn20J
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- iiipopes
- Utility Infielder

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Well, I looked at the Conn website in disbelief, and, drop my mouthpiece, the cyborg has quit making it. Damn cyborg.CTAYLOR wrote:actually they stopped making 14k's in the 60's or 70's i believeiiipopes wrote:Since they are still made, and since there are so many out there, repairs should never be a problem,.
Jupiter JTU1110
"Real" Conn 36K
"Real" Conn 36K
- TUbajohn20J
- 4 valves

- Posts: 946
- Joined: Tue Nov 20, 2007 5:44 pm
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- iiipopes
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35 pounds of the best souzy I have ever played. The tone is, well, huge. Truly a 6/4 in the souzy world, even if it only has a 24 inch bell. And since converting the upper 1st valve slide loop to a left hand slide, intonation is spot on. I use a Kelly 18, as it is so huge it can handle a bowl to really solidify the overtones to blend and project outdoors. But being the standard valve block, it doesn't take any more air than a 14K.
Jupiter JTU1110
"Real" Conn 36K
"Real" Conn 36K
- TUbajohn20J
- 4 valves

- Posts: 946
- Joined: Tue Nov 20, 2007 5:44 pm
- Location: Sugar Land, Texas
- TUbajohn20J
- 4 valves

- Posts: 946
- Joined: Tue Nov 20, 2007 5:44 pm
- Location: Sugar Land, Texas

